ARAB AND WORLD

Sun 11 Feb 2024 7:45 am - Jerusalem Time

Egyptian sources reveal: Hamas’ response surprised Israeli Government

As soon as the Hamas movement submitted its response to the proposed scenario of concluding a prisoner exchange deal between the occupation government and the resistance in Gaza, to the mediators in Egypt and Qatar concerned with the Gaza discussions, a series of meetings and communications began between the mediators and the parties to the crisis, in an attempt to reach an agreement as quickly as possible. In order to defuse the explosion of the situation in the region and the expansion of the circle of conflict, amid the escalation of military actions on the Lebanon front, and the threats of Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to launch a large-scale military operation in Rafah.


Gaza talks: fruitful meetings for Hamas in Cairo

In this context, the Hamas delegation, which began a visit to Cairo, held joint marathon meetings with those responsible for the mediation file in Egypt and Qatar, to explain the point of view of the resistance and Hamas regarding the response presented to the prisoner exchange offer.


Egyptian sources familiar with the Gaza talks revealed, in interviews with Al-Araby Al-Jadeed newspaper, that “the meetings held by the movement’s delegation in Cairo were fruitful,” noting that “Egyptian estimates of the response presented by the resistance consider it to be very realistic, in contrast to What the American administration or the Israeli side sees, and that the points that the Egyptian officials find difficult to pass do not exceed two points at the maximum, and that they can be resolved in a quick time, if the political will is available on the Israeli side, and these negotiations are removed from the circle of internal political conflict in Israel."


An informed Egyptian source revealed that “the Israeli government was surprised by the form of the response that Hamas submitted to the mediators,” saying: “There was a perception or expectation among the Israeli War Council that Hamas would provide a brief response of approval or rejection of the framework agreement, followed by an indirect negotiation process.” To formulate the details, but Hamas surprised everyone by responding by formulating very precise details of the stages proposed by the Paris meeting in general, without going into details.


He continued: “Perhaps the form of the response of Hamas and the resistance factions is what caused confusion within the Israeli government, which was preparing to prolong the process of negotiating a ceasefire and releasing the prisoners, in a way that would make it emerge from the impasse it faces in front of the families of the prisoners and the opposition, as well as the American administration.” 


In contrast, the Egyptian source revealed that “the leaks contained in the Israeli media regarding the Israeli government’s refusal to withdraw from Gaza to the separation fence or to allow the return of residents to the northern and central regions are incorrect,” saying that “the occupation government, represented by the head of the Mossad, David Barnea, has expressed its willingness to accept this during the Paris meeting.”


The source explained that “the most prominent Israeli objections are represented in two parts of the movement’s response. One of them is what the occupation government describes as a summary of all the demands of the resistance that are binding on Israel in the first stage, while keeping the marginal points for the rest of the stages, while postponing the release of all prisoners until the last stages to prolong the duration of the agreement, and that so far Israel has refused to make any pledges regarding engaging in serious negotiations for a comprehensive ceasefire after the first phase of the agreement.”


The Egyptian source revealed that “what is being raised about Israel’s refusal to send a representative delegation to Cairo is not accurate,” noting that the next few days “will witness the arrival of an Israeli delegation to determine the position of Hamas and the resistance, following the meetings that Cairo witnessed, in order to develop a paper with complete points that require further negotiation and consultation, before CIA Director William Burns arrives in Cairo.”


Double Duty by William Burns

The source also revealed that Burns "will come to Cairo on a dual mission. In addition to the mission of advancing the Gaza talks and the negotiation process between the occupation government and Hamas and working to resolve the controversial points, he will also work to ease the Egyptian-American atmosphere in the wake of President Joe Biden's statements that caused embarrassment to the Egyptian leadership." During which he indicated that he convinced Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to open the Rafah crossing for aid after Sisi rejected that step.


Biden said in a surprise speech at the White House that Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi did not initially want to open the Rafah crossing for aid to enter Gaza, but he spoke to him and convinced him to open it, according to what he said.


The sources said, “With regard to the current course of negotiations, Egyptian officials have ended their meetings with the Hamas delegation that recently visited Cairo to discuss the response to the paper on the Paris proposal, by reaching positive understandings, but the crisis is centered around the hardline position of Benjamin Netanyahu’s government towards reaching an agreement.” The sources suggested that "Netanyahu will not stop firing, at the present time," saying that "it is unlikely that he will submit to the warnings of the United States and the warnings of neighboring countries."


In this context, Professor of Political Science and International Relations, Issam Abdel Shafi, told Al-Arabi Al-Jadeed, “The conditions presented by the Hamas movement are linked to a set of basic files that express what the movement sought to achieve from this process, which is the file of prisoners in the first place, then the reconstruction file, then the file of lifting the siege, as well as the Al-Aqsa Mosque file, in addition to what is also related to restoring the infrastructure in the Gaza Strip, and these are the basic files included in the demands.”

Abdel Shafi stressed that “those demands were not as high as the American President said, when he said that they were somewhat exaggerated, but Netanyahu came out in his press conference to express his reservations about these demands, and I will not say that he rejected them, and that he would continue military operations until what was achieved.” He called it overwhelming victory. In my view, this is a language for local consumption, with which he addresses the interior and does not address external parties, because he knows that as long as he accepts entering into these negotiations, concessions must be made.”


Regarding the visit of the Palestinian delegation headed by the leader of the movement, Khalil Al-Hayya, to Egypt, the political science professor said that it “comes within the framework of completing these negotiations, and from my point of view, things are moving towards signing an interim truce agreement.”


In another context, a leader in the Hamas movement confirmed to Al-Araby Al-Jadeed that the movement is “serious about reaching understandings with the Palestinian Authority regarding the perceptions of the next day in Gaza after the cessation of the aggression.” He explained that the movement “delivered to Cairo a vision that includes its vision for managing the Gaza Strip after the end of the aggression,” saying: “Hamas is serious about not being at the forefront and not adhering to managing the Strip in a Palestinian-Palestinian solution without external interference,” stressing that the movement “does not oppose the formation of a national unity government  responsible for managing the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.”

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 9:35 pm - Jerusalem Time

Netanyahu requests remobilization of reserve soldiers in preparation for the invasion of Rafah

On Saturday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu asked Army Chief of Staff Herzi Halevy to remobilize reserve soldiers in preparation for launching a military ground operation in the city of Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip, according to Hebrew media.


The private Hebrew Channel 13 said that Netanyahu asked Halevy to remobilize the reserve forces that were demobilized in preparation for the possible operation of the Israeli army in Rafah.


In turn, Halevy said, “The army will be able to handle any mission, but there are political aspects that must be taken care of first,” according to the same source.


Meanwhile, a senior Israeli official, who preferred to remain anonymous, told the same channel: “The operation in Rafah is approaching.”


On Friday, Israel officially announced its readiness for the operation in Rafah, when the Prime Minister's Office announced that Netanyahu "ordered the Israeli army and the security establishment to submit a dual plan to the government to evacuate the population and destroy Hamas brigades."


The Israeli army is preparing to carry out a ground military operation in the Rafah area, south of the Gaza Strip, according to official sources and Hebrew media.


Israel informed a number of countries in the region and the United States that it is preparing for military activity in the Rafah area, according to the official broadcasting authority.


International estimates indicate that there are between 1.2 and 1.4 million Palestinians in Rafah after the Israeli army forced hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in the northern Gaza Strip to flee to the south.


Since the beginning of the ground operation launched by Israel in the Gaza Strip on October 27, it has been asking residents to go from the north and center of the Strip to the south, claiming that they are safe areas, but it has not been spared from bombing homes and cars.


As of Saturday, the ground operation had reached Khan Yunis and had not extended to Rafah, even though the Israeli army had carried out air strikes and extensive artillery shelling on sites in Rafah since the beginning of the war on October 7.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 7:59 pm - Jerusalem Time

Bernie Sanders: How can Washington condemn the Russian bombing while funding Netanyahu's war machine?

US Senator Bernie Sanders asked: How can his country condemn the Russian bombing of Ukraine while funding Netanyahu's war machine?


He continued by saying, in a blog post on his account on the “X” platform: How can we criticize the human rights record in Iran and China, and ignore the human rights of the Palestinian people?


Two days ago, US Senator Bernie Sanders criticized the Senate’s intention to provide military aid to Israel and said that the Senate “is considering granting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu $14 billion to continue the indiscriminate bombing of the Gaza Strip.”


US Senator Sanders denounced the matter, wondering how the Senate could seriously criticize “Putin’s war crimes in Ukraine” while ignoring the killing of 27,000 Palestinian children.


Last month, Sanders accused the United States of being complicit in “the nightmare that the Palestinian people are experiencing.”


In a speech before the Senate, Sanders stressed that he finds it difficult to understand why Congress does not act to stop the suffering of the Palestinians and address the humanitarian catastrophe they face in Gaza.


The number of dead in Gaza increases

For the 127th day in a row, the Israeli army continues its aggression against the Gaza Strip, with American and European support, as its planes bomb the vicinity of hospitals, buildings, towers, and homes of Palestinian civilians, destroying them above the heads of their residents, and preventing the entry of water, food, medicine, and fuel.


The occupation's continued aggression against Gaza led to the death toll of 28,064 killed and the injury of another 67,611 wounded, in addition to the displacement of more than 85 percent (about 1.9 million people) of the Strip's population, according to the Strip's authorities and international bodies and organizations.


OPINIONS

Sat 10 Feb 2024 7:08 pm - Jerusalem Time

US Jews reached out to mend their relationship with Israel, and Ben Gvir slapped them in the face

Maariv

Maariv

Opinion Writer

By Shlomo Shamir

The genuine stance taken by the Jewish community in the United States alongside Israel in its war against Hamas, the absolute support for every move and step taken by Israel, and the emergency fund that collected, in a short time, donations exceeding 700 million dollars, were all nothing but an expression of the love of the large Jewish community in the United States for Israel.

Expressions of American Jewish support for Israel were, and still are, a possibility for restoring and renewing the relationship between Israel and the community [after years of deteriorating relations between them under Netanyahu’s rule, for reasons related to his political approach, and the religious coercion that allowed his partners in the Haredi movement to suppress the central Jewish religious movements in The United States, and finally: his support for Donald Trump]. This possibility would have put an end to the crisis, discord and separation that have afflicted relations between Israel and the vast and leading majority of American Jews over the past years.

The one who jeopardizes the restoration of relations is Minister Ben Gvir. Ben Gvir is the ideological heir to Meir Kahane, a notorious figure in the history of the American Jewish community. Ben Gvir has fueled the hostility of American Jews to the extremist right-wing - religious - Israeli government currently in power, which upsets the vast and decisive majority of Jews in the United States. These people identify with liberalism, and their gatherings are considered a stronghold for liberals. Ben Gvir's attack on President Joe Biden in the interview conducted with him by the Wall Street Journal was sharp and exacerbated the contempt that the Jews of the American community feel for Ben Gvir's personality and his presence as a government minister.

Senior Jewish officials and legal persons responded harshly and with overwhelming anger to Ben Gvir’s statements against Biden. By the way, they are people known for their moderation and caution in their language, especially regarding issues related to Israel. In their responses, they did not only express their anger about insulting Biden, as the Democratic president they voted for, but rather their anger focused on the fact that an Israeli minister insulted and humiliated the most friendly American president in the history of the White House, as he is “a president who helped Israel in its war against Hamas.” Not only with supportive words and statements, but also by sending weapons and ammunition,” said a senior official in the Jewish community.

“You have to be mentally ill to attack a president like Biden,” said Abraham (Eve) Foxman, seething with rage. Foxman is considered one of the most important legal figures in the community, and a moderate person. He added: “It is dangerous, and destabilizes the vital relations between Israel and the United States, for Israeli politicians, such as Ben Gvir and Smotrich, to tamper with these relations and demonstrate their extremism by targeting the United States. Biden supports Israel with actions, not words, and he is the main and most important party in providing support to Israel in the international arena.”

Foxman, who still has ties to Netanyahu, said in an interview with the Maariv newspaper: “It is not enough for Netanyahu to heap praise on Biden, in response to the extreme right in the country. Netanyahu must personally condemn and reject Ben Gvir’s statements that endanger Israeli interests. It is time for Netanyahu to adopt a clear and direct line, stating that the Land of Israel, the people of Israel, and the United States are one body.”

In response to Ben Gvir's statements towards Biden, the community's senior leaders expressed their anger at Netanyahu specifically, as they claim that he is "responsible for the transformation of a suspicious figure, like Ben Gvir, into a major figure representing Israel." Eric Yoffe, who served for many years as head of the Reform movement, is a political activist, and shows great interest in the community, told the Maariv newspaper, saying: “Netanyahu’s name will be recorded in the history books, along with his responsibility for the October 7 disaster. He is the one who strengthened Ben Gvir, the racist who poisoned Israeli relations with the international community, undermines vital American support for Israel, and embarrasses the Jews of the United States. Ben Gvir is a disgrace to Zionism, and he represents a real threat to the existence of Israel. Netanyahu should have ousted him a long time ago. 

“But President Biden’s support for Israel will continue. Ben Gvir is too weak, marginal and insignificant, and cannot harm Biden’s friendship with Israel. Ben Gvir is capable, and perhaps concerned, and seeks to harm, sabotage, and prevent the opening of a new page in the relationship between Israel and the large Jewish community in the United States.” United States. This community is considered a bastion of liberalism, may God protect it.”

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 6:39 pm - Jerusalem Time

Jerusalem Post article: The Gaza war is straining Israel's economy

With its credit rating downgraded for the first time in its history to “A2” with a negative outlook, and while Israel faces the challenges of the current war on Gaza, the economic threats looming on the Israeli economy are growing.

Recent discussions at the Economic Outlook 2024 conference in Tel Aviv revealed a consensus of concern among experts and leaders, highlighting the need for an urgent reassessment of priorities.


With the increasing economic pressures resulting from the escalation of military expenditures, experts believe that focusing on the necessity of financial responsibility and making strategic decisions to protect economic stability in the face of unprecedented challenges is a priority at this stage.


In an opinion article by financial affairs writer Shoshana Tita published in the Israeli newspaper The Jerusalem Post, she expressed her concern about the impact of the ongoing war in Gaza on the economy, and stressed the need for a shift in the government’s priorities.


The article draws insights from a conference in Tel Aviv entitled “Economic Outlook for 2024” where leading experts unanimously agreed that Israel cannot continue with business as usual after October 7.


The author highlights the rapid growth that the Israeli economy has witnessed over the past two decades, which contributed to reducing the deficit. However, she says that the current conflict requires a reassessment of priorities due to the significant increase in military expenditures.


In comparison with the critical period of 1974, the author stresses the importance of avoiding a repeat of the lost decade that followed the October 1973 war.


The author proposed a "New Deal" similar to Franklin Delano Roosevelt's initiative after the Great Depression in 1933, with the aim of addressing the large military, economic and social expenses facing Israel.


In the author’s opinion, a demilitarized Gaza in 2024 will require a “Marshall Plan” funded by Europe and the United States, which will ultimately benefit Israel.


She points out the financial pressures caused by the war, and that the cost of each Iron Dome interceptor missile ranges between $50,000 and $70,000. Military spending has already reached NIS 75 billion ($20.4 billion) since the start of the war, with expectations that it could reach NIS 125 billion ($34 billion) this year, excluding a possible large-scale war with Hezbollah in the north.


The author refers to Dov Kotler (CEO of Bank Hapoalim) calling on the government to exercise financial responsibility to finance the escalating military expenditures and reconstruction expenses in southern and northern Israel.


The article conveys the warning of Eyal Ben Simon (CEO of Phoenix Holdings) that Israel entered the year 2024 in weak economic conditions due to misguided economic priorities, stressing the need to make difficult choices at the economic crossroads that Israel faces.


For his part, opposition leader Yair Lapid expressed his concern about the imbalance between the size of the government and the army. He said that maintaining the NIS 25 billion increase in the military budget will require a collective effort from all sectors of the population.

OPINIONS

Sat 10 Feb 2024 6:24 pm - Jerusalem Time

NETANYAHU’S WAR ON TRUTH: Israel’s Ruthless Propaganda Campaign to Dehumanize Palestinians

The Intercept

The Intercept

Opinion Writer

By Jeremy Scahill

TWO WEEKS BEFORE Hamas commandos led a series of raids into Israel on October 7, Benjamin Netanyahu stood before an  at the United Nations headquarters in New York City. The Israeli prime minister brandished a map of what he promised could be the “New Middle East.” It depicted a state of Israel that stretched continuously from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea. On this map, Gaza and the West Bank were erased. Palestinians did not exist. “What a historic change for my country! You see, the land of Israel is situated on the crossroads between Africa, Asia, and Europe,” Netanyahu  at a handful of spectators in the large hall, nearly all of whom were his loyalists or underlings. “For centuries, my country was repeatedly invaded by empires passing through it in their campaigns of plunder and conquest elsewhere. But today, as we tear down walls of enmity, Israel can become a bridge of peace and prosperity between these continents.” During that speech, Netanyahu portrayed the full normalizing of relations with Saudi Arabia, an initiative spearheaded under the Trump administration and embraced by the Biden White House, as the linchpin of his vision for this “new” reality, one which would open the door to a “visionary corridor that will stretch across the Arabian Peninsula and Israel. It will connect India to Europe with maritime links, rail links, energy pipelines, fiber-optic cables.” 

He was speaking on the grand stage of the U.N. General Assembly, but no world leaders bothered to attend. Outside, some 2,000 people, a mixture of American Jews and Israeli citizens, protested his attacks on the independence of the Israeli judiciary system. The scene served as a reminder of how deeply unpopular his far-right governing coalition, not to mention Netanyahu himself, had become in Israel. At that moment, it seemed that Netanyahu was pushed against the ropes, in a losing battle to continue his political reign.

Netanyahu is using the horrors of October 7 to wage the crusade he’s been preparing for his entire political career.

Just days later, as Hamas commandos penetrated the barriers encircling Gaza and embarked on their deadly raids targeting several military installations as well as kibbutzim, everything changed in an instant. Everything, that is, except the primary agenda that has been at the center of Netanyahu’s long political career: the absolute destruction of Palestine and its people.

Just as the Bush administration exploited the 9/11 attacks to justify a sweeping war in which it declared the world a battlefield, Netanyahu is using the horrors of October 7 to wage the crusade he’s been preparing for his entire political career. With his grip on power fading last fall, the October 7 attacks provided him with just the opportunity he needed, and he hitched his political survival to the war on Gaza and what could be his last chance to eliminate Israel’s Palestinian problem once and for all. In that sense, Bibi was saved by Hamas. 

Intelligence Failures 

Four months in, Netanyahu’s war of annihilation against Gaza has become a guerrilla war of attrition. Not a single Israeli hostage has been freed through military force, and Hamas has shown an enduring resilience and ability to pick off Israel Defense Forces soldiers. The Israeli public, outside of the ideological true believers intent on occupying and settling Gaza, is showing signs of fatigue and desperation. Many family members of captives are  in their demands for an immediate deal with Hamas that centers the lives of their loved ones over the political agenda laid out by Netanyahu and his clique. Some have demanded new elections or Netanyahu’s resignation. Protests against the war, though small, are beginning to grow inside Israel, with some demonstrations echoing global calls demanding a humanitarian ceasefire and an end to Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory.

As the death toll in Gaza surpasses a conservative estimate of 27,000 lives, many of the core narratives deployed by the Israeli and U.S. governments to justify the slaughter are coming under increased scrutiny; some have been definitively debunked. In Israel, this is a delicate line of inquiry. That Hamas killed large numbers of Israelis is not in doubt. But how they managed to do so while living under the lauded and vigilant eyes of the Mossad, Shin Bet, the Israeli Security Agency, and the IDF is the subject of mounting public attention.

There have been several credible reports that Israeli intelligence analysts warned that Hamas operatives appeared to be training for raids into Israel. The New York Times and other outlets have reported on the existence of a 40-page internal Hamas document code-named “Jericho Wall.” Purportedly obtained by Israeli intelligence, it is said to lay out detailed plans by Hamas to conduct precisely the type of assault against Israeli military installations and villages that occurred on October 7.While warnings from Israeli analysts who reviewed the document were reportedly brushed aside by senior officials, last July a signals intelligence officer urged the chain of command to take it seriously. Noting a recent daylong training exercise by Hamas in Gaza, the analyst asserted that the training precisely mirrored the operations laid out in the document. “It is a plan designed to start a war,” she pleaded. “It’s not just a raid on a village.” 

The night before Hamas’s raid, intelligence analysts began reporting significant evidence suggesting that Hamas might be preparing for an attack inside Israel. The head of Shin Bet traveled to the south and orders were issued to deploy a special counterterror force to confront any potential incursions, according to an investigative report in the Israeli publication Yedioth Ahronoth.

Shortly after 3 a.m. on October 7, a senior intelligence official concluded the activity in Gaza was likely another Hamas training exercise, saying, “We still believe that [Hamas leader Yahya] Sinwar is not pivoting towards an escalation.”

A few hours later, as Israeli officials gathered in a command center chaotically scrambling to deploy forces to respond to the multipronged attacks led by Hamas, a senior officer silenced the room: “The Gaza Division was overpowered.” Early on in the war against Gaza, Netanyahu sought to  for failing to foresee Hamas’s attacks onto his intelligence services. “Contrary to the false claims: Under no circumstances and at no stage was Prime Minister Netanyahu warned of Hamas’s war intentions,” read a tweet posted on Netanyahu’s official Twitter account. “On the contrary, all the security officials, including the head of military intelligence and the head of the Shin Bet, assessed that Hamas had been deterred and was looking for a settlement. This assessment was submitted again and again to the prime minister and the cabinet by all the security forces and intelligence community, up until the outbreak of the war.” But serious questions lingered over how Hamas was able to lay siege to large sections of what Israel calls the “Gaza envelope” and whether Netanyahu had knowledge that an attack of this very nature was being planned in full view of Israel’s extensive surveillance systems and spy networks. There is also a mounting body of evidence to indicate that Israeli forces were given orders on October 7 to stop Hamas’s attacks at all costs, including the killing of Israeli civilians taken captive by Palestinian fighters. The Israeli military has indicated that it plans to conduct an “uncompromising” investigation into the intelligence failures, drawing the ire of some far-right members of Netanyahu’s government. Under fire from his own ministers and supporters for impugning Israeli military and intelligence agencies, Netanyahu apologized for his comments, deleted the tweet, and then shifted to the stance he now repeats: There will be a time for such inquiries — but only after Israel achieves total victory in Gaza and eliminates Hamas. “The only thing that I intend to have resign is Hamas,” he said in November. “We’re going to resign them to the dustbin of history.” 

Information Warfare

The violent ethnonationalist ideology at the center of Netanyahu’s reign was born before his tenure and will endure when he’s gone. But his rule has embodied the most extremist and destructive version of the Israeli state project. Netanyahu understands the power of defining and dominating the narrative, particularly when targeting it to U.S. audiences. For decades, he has advanced the Israeli propaganda doctrine of hasbara — the notion that Israelis must be aggressive about “explaining” and justifying their actions to the West — to manipulate his adversaries and allies, domestic and international, into serving his objectives. Netanyahu’s “vision of himself as the chief defender of the Jewish people against calamity allowed him to justify almost anything that would keep him in power,” observed former President Barack Obama in his 2020 memoir.

In the aftermath of October 7, Netanyahu cast Israel’s siege of a tiny strip of land the size of Philadelphia as a war of the worlds in which the very fate of humanity was at stake. “It’s not only our war. It’s your war too,” Netanyahu said in his first interview on CNN after the October 7 attacks. “It’s the battle of civilization against barbarism. And if we don’t win here, this scourge will pass. The Middle East will pass to other places. The Middle East will fall. Europe is next. You will be next.” The Israeli government rapidly deployed a multipronged propaganda strategy to win unprecedented support from the U.S. and other Western governments for a sweeping war against the entire population of Gaza. To oppose Israel’s war is antisemitic; to question its assertions about the events of October 7 is akin to Holocaust denial; to protest the mass killing of Palestinian civilians is to do the bidding of Hamas.

 

At the center of Israel’s information warfare campaign is a tactical mission to dehumanize Palestinians and to flood the public discourse with a stream of false, unsubstantiated, and unverifiable allegations. “We were struck Saturday by an attack whose savagery I can say we have not seen since the Holocaust,” Netanyahu told President Joe Biden in a phone call on October 11. “They took dozens of children, bound them up, burned them and executed them.” He added: “We have never seen such savagery in the history of the state. They’re even worse than ISIS and we need to treat them as such.” “We are fighting human animals and we are acting accordingly,”  Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on October 9.The message of these statements and others like them was clear: Israel is confronting monsters, and no one has any business telling the Jewish state, established in the aftermath of World War II under the mantra of “Never again,” how to respond to an attempted genocide. Israeli officials routinely invoke the Holocaust, compare Hamas to the Nazis or to ISIS, and portray the events of October 7 as evidence of an organized effort to commit genocide against the Jewish people. On October 10, three days after the attacks, the Israeli military organized a tour for international journalists to view the scene at Kfar Aza Kibbutz. As they guided reporters and camera crews through the community, IDF officials spread rumors that as many as 40 babies had been murdered by Hamas, some of them beheaded. “It’s something I never saw in my life. It’s something I used to imagine of my grandmother and my grandfather in Europe and other places,” an Israeli general told reporters. “We got very, very disturbing reports that came from the ground that there were babies that had been beheaded,” said IDF spokesperson Jonathan Conricus in a briefing for international journalists. “I admit it took us some time to really understand and to verify that report. It was hard to believe that even Hamas could perform such a barbaric act.”Lt. Col. Guy Basson, deputy commander of the Israeli army’s Kfir Brigade, claimed that he saw the aftermath of eight babies who were executed in a nursery at Kibbutz Be’eri. Among the victims, Basson asserted, was also a survivor of the Auschwitz death camp. “I see the number engraved on her arm, and you say to yourself, she went through the Holocaust in Auschwitz and ended up dying on Kibbutz Be’eri.” Another Israeli soldier told  a journalist that “babies and children were hung on a clothes line in a row.” 

Three weeks after the October 7 attacks, Eli Beer, the head of a volunteer EMS squad in Israel, traveled to the U.S. and addressed a gathering at the convention of the Republican Jewish Coalition in Las Vegas. “I saw in my own eyes a woman who was pregnant, four months pregnant,” he said. “They came into her house, in front of her kids, they opened up her stomach took out the baby, and stabbed the little, tiny baby in front of her and then shot her in front of her family and then they killed the rest of the kids.” Beer offered graphic descriptions of other horrors he claimed to have witnessed. “These bastards put these babies in an oven and put on the oven. We found the kid a few hours later,” he told the U.S. audience on October 28. “I saw little kids who were beheaded. We didn’t know which head belonged to which kid.” Beer, whose stories were widely reported in the international media, also met with Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Israel soon after the attack. But there is a problem with the gut-wrenching narratives that have bolstered the underlying justification for the slaughter of Gaza: They are either complete fabrications or have not been substantiated with a shred of evidence. Many have been thoroughly disproven by major Israeli media outlets.In the immediate aftermath of the attacks, Netanyahu and other Israeli officials presented U.S. and international leaders with a range of graphic images and videos along with unverified narrative explanations for what they allegedly depicted. “It’s simply depravity in the worst imaginable way,” Blinken said after first viewing the photos. “Images are worth a thousand words. These images may be worth a million.”

In a coup for Netanyahu’s hasbara campaign, Biden and other leaders have laundered many of Israel’s obscene lies.

In a coup for Netanyahu’s hasbara campaign, Biden and other leaders have laundered many of Israel’s obscene lies. Beginning just days after October 7, Biden repeatedly claimed that he personally saw photographs of beheaded babies and more atrocities. Even after the White House admitted Biden had seen no such photos, he continued to make the allegation, including after visiting Netanyahu and other Israeli officials in Tel Aviv. “I saw some of the photographs when I was there — tying a mother and her daughter together on a rope and then pouring kerosene on them and then burning them, beheading infants, doing things that are just inhuman — totally, completely inhuman,” Biden said at a campaign event in December. 


Blinken told the U.S. Senate another harrowing story about how Hamas terrorists had tortured a family in their living room while intermittently taking breaks to eat a meal their victims had placed on the dining table before the horrors began that morning. “A young boy and girl, 6 and 8 years old, and their parents around the breakfast table. The father’s eye gouged out in front of his kids. The mother’s breast cut off, the girl’s foot amputated, the boy’s fingers cut off before they were executed,” Blinken said. “And then their executioners sat down and had a meal. That is what this society is dealing with.” The story Blinken told about terrorists eating a meal while torturing an Israeli family, as well as some of the assertions about decapitated babies, was based on the speculative fiction invented by Yossi Landau, an official from the scandal-plagued private Israeli rescue organization Zaka, who has repeatedly spread wildly false stories.

 

There was no Holocaust survivor killed at Kibbutz Be’eri that day. There were no mass beheadings of babies, no group executions in a nursery, no children hung from clotheslines, and no infants placed in ovens. No pregnant woman had her stomach cut open and the fetus knifed in front of her and her other children. These stories are entirely fictional, a set of audacious lies weaponized to generate the type of collective rage used to justify the unjustifiable. According to major Israeli media outlets that have worked diligently to identify all the victims of the October 7 attacks, there was one infant killed that day: a 9-month-old named Mila Cohen who was shot dead at Kibbutz Be’eri as her mother held her in her arms. Cohen’s mother, who was wounded by gunfire, survived. Among the other civilians killed on October 7, seven of them were between the ages of 2 and 9 years, and 28 were between the ages of 10 and 19. Fourteen of these children died in Hamas rocket attacks, not at the hands of the armed commandos who stormed the kibbutzes. There is no doubt that widespread atrocities and war crimes were committed during the Hamas-led attacks of October 7. It is also true that Israeli military, government, and rescue officials have engaged in a deliberate misinformation campaign about the nature of many deaths that occurred that day.

These stories are a set of audacious lies weaponized to generate the type of collective rage used to justify the unjustifiable.

Israeli officials have toured the world with a film produced at the direction of the IDF. The 47-minute “Bearing Witness to the October 7 Massacre” features video allegedly seized from Palestinian attackers equipped with GoPro cameras and cellphones, according to Israeli officials. The movie has not been released to the public and has only been available via special invitation from the Israeli government. Its audiences have included Hollywood celebrities, dozens of U.S. lawmakers and government officials, journalists, and global luminaries; it has screened at various international venues, including museums established in memory of the Holocaust. While hours of footage of the attacks and their aftermath are available online, including video shot by Palestinians who participated in the raids, the Israeli government has said the footage is too sensitive to be publicly released. An IDF official, in uniform, personally delivers the professionally produced Digital Cinema Package for the screenings, and viewers are required to sign nondisclosure agreements affirming they will not record or distribute the footage. “It will change the way you view the Middle East and the way you view the war in Gaza,” said Gilad Erdan, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, at the Los Angeles premiere of the footage last November. The film was characterized in media accounts as depicting “murder, beheadings, rapes and other atrocities against Jewish adults and children.” The event, at the Museum of Tolerance, was organized by Israeli actor Gal Gadot, star of the “Wonder Woman” movies, for film executives and other members of the Hollywood industry. “Hamas must be eradicated. This is the only way to prevent another massacre,” Erdan added. “If Israel doesn’t eradicate this evil, mark my words: The West is next.” While Israel has emphasized how incendiary the footage is, British journalist Owen Jones, who attended an IDF screening in the U.K., said a “significant amount” of the video is already in the public domain. He said that while there was footage of one IDF soldier who had apparently been decapitated, as well as the already public footage of an unsuccessful attempt to behead a migrant Thai worker with a garden tool, there was no footage substantiating allegations of torture, sexual violence, and mass beheadings, including of babies or other children. “Clearly this footage hasn’t been selected at random. You would expect it to be the worst material that they have,” Jones said. “This isn’t to say none of this happened, it’s just not in the footage, which has been provided by the Israeli authorities.” Israel’s hasbara campaign is reminiscent of the Bush administration’s monthslong carnival of lies, sanitized and promoted by major media outlets, about alleged weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. And Biden directly participated in President George W. Bush’s campaign as well. In his October 2002 Senate floor speech endorsing war against Iraq, Biden declared that Saddam Hussein “possesses chemical and biological weapons and is seeking nuclear weapons.” 

Allegations of Systematic Rape 

The Israeli propaganda machine is well oiled. Anyone can look back at Israel’s four-month war against Gaza and trace a pattern: Israel chooses an issue and demands global attention to its agenda at the expense of any other matter. When news organizations began reporting on the civilian toll of Israel’s initial airstrikes against Gaza, the government accused photographers for major news organizations of being Hamas members or sympathizers who had foreknowledge of the October 7 attacks. Netanyahu said the journalists were “accomplices in crimes against humanity.” Israel then portrayed Gaza’s hospitals as secret Hamas command centers, an allegation that the Biden administration bolstered as the IDF prepared to lay siege to Al-Shifa Hospital last November. Throughout the war, Israel has sought to direct media and global attention to various new smoking-gun narratives. And in nearly every case, it succeeds in getting the U.S. on board to launder and promote the talking points. In late November, as the civilian death toll in Gaza climbed, Israel was struggling to retain its dominance of the narrative. Global demands for a ceasefire were mounting, and even some of Israel’s allies were expressing horror at the indiscriminate killing of women and children and the worsening humanitarian catastrophe. A weeklong truce, during which captives were exchanged, raised hopes that a more enduring peace deal could be on the horizon, despite Israeli insistence that that was out of the question. “A prolonged ceasefire that allows more hostages to be released, and that evolves towards a permanent ceasefire linked to a political process, is something we have consensus on,” said the EU’s top foreign policy official Josep Borrell.

Days earlier, the prime ministers of Spain and Belgium traveled to the Rafah border to push for such a deal and drew the fury of the Israeli government when they publicly condemned the indiscriminate killing of Palestinian civilians. Eli Cohen, then the Israeli foreign minister, accused the leaders of offering “support [for] terrorism,” while Netanyahu released a statement condemning them because they “did not place total responsibility on Hamas for the crimes against humanity it perpetrated.”

Anyone can look back at Israel’s four-month war against Gaza and trace a pattern: Israel chooses an issue and demands global attention to its agenda at the expense of any other matter.

It was at this moment that the Israeli government decided it needed to remind the world of Israel’s victimhood and launched a new phase of the hasbara campaign. It began accusing the international community of standing silent in the face of what Israeli officials described as a widespread campaign of rape and sexual violence aimed at Jewish women and orchestrated by Hamas on October 7. By early December, the issue had become a major focus of conservative media and Israel’s allies. “I say to the women’s rights organizations, to the human rights organizations, you’ve heard of the rape of Israeli women, horrible atrocities, sexual mutilation? Where the hell are you?” Netanyahu said in a December 5 speech in Tel Aviv. That day, on the other side of the globe, Biden was at a campaign fundraising event in Boston. “Over the past few weeks, survivors and witnesses of the attacks have shared the horrific accounts of unimaginable cruelty: reports of women raped — repeatedly raped and their bodies being mutilated while still alive, of women corpses being desecrated, and Hamas terrorists inflicting as much pain and suffering as — on women and girls as possible and then murdering them. And it’s appalling,” Biden said . “The world can’t just look away — what’s going on. It’s on all of us — the government, international organizations, civil society, individual citizens — to forcefully condemn the sexual violence of Hamas terrorists without equivocation — without equivocation, without exception.” From the earliest moments following the October 7 attacks, Israel charged that women had been raped by Hamas fighters, though it was often an allegation made in sequence alongside other alleged atrocities. But in mid-November, those assertions began evolving into a sustained public blitz, accusing  Hamas of instituting a plan to “systematically rape women.” Israel government spokesperson Eylon Levy spoke  of a “Hamas rapist machine.” “Hamas used rape and sexual violence as weapons of war,” charged  Erdan, the U.N. ambassador. “These were not spur-of-the-moment decisions to defile and mutilate girls and parade them while onlookers cheered; rather, this was premeditated.” 

To date, there has been no credible evidence presented publicly that such a campaign took place, and Hamas has vehemently denied that its fighters committed any acts of rape or sexual assault. The fact that Israel has not produced forensic evidence for individual rapes does not prove that no such deeds took place. Rape investigations are often complex, particularly when the crime occurs amid a chaotic scene of mass violence. Sexual violence is common in warfare, and it often takes years for the full story of such crimes to emerge. But there is a difference between making specific allegations of rape or sexual assault and charging that organized mass rape was a central component of an operation meticulously planned over the course of years. Israel’s evidence of the latter comes nowhere near to measuring up to its claims. Israeli rescue workers as well as civilian and military medical officials have described evidence of dead women who were naked or had clothing removed, as well as women who were subjected to genital mutilation, though they have not released documentary or forensic evidence. But many of the most graphic allegations  of mass rapes have been offered by Israeli military or rescue officials who acknowledge they have no training  or expertise in forensics. Some of them, whose claims have been featured in many media accounts, also spread false stories about other alleged atrocities. 

Shari Mendes, an architect serving in the IDF reserves in a rabbinical unit, was deployed to a morgue to prepare bodies for burial after the attacks. An American originally from New Jersey, Mendes did multiple TV and print interviews about her experiences. “We have seen women who have been raped, from the age of children through to the elderly,” she told  reporters, emphasizing , “This is not just something we saw on the internet, we saw these bodies with our own eyes.”For months, Mendes has served as one of the most visible witnesses bolstering Israel’s allegations of systematic rape. But few media outlets featuring her claims have mentioned the valid concerns  about her credibility and her history of promoting a false story. She told  the Daily Mail last October, “A baby was cut out of a pregnant woman and beheaded and then the mother was beheaded.” 

On December 5, as Israel engaged in a global media push around its allegations that Hamas had committed mass rapes, Mendes was a featured speaker at an event  in New York organized by Israel’s mission to the U.N. on sexual violence and the October 7 attacks. The Times of Israel reported  that Mendes “is not legally qualified to determine rape.” The observations of first responders or members of religious burial units, particularly those without relevant scientific credentials, are not a replacement for forensic documentation of an uncontaminated crime scene. Israeli authorities have said evidence that would typically be taken in cases of suspected sexual assault was not recovered in the aftermath of the attacks, attributing this failure to a combination of the magnitude of the deaths, the charred nature of some bodies, and to Jewish burial practices.

Some of the evidence publicly cited  by Israeli officials is testimony provided by Zaka, the private Israeli rescue organization whose members have been widely documented to have spread false allegations. Haaretz published an exposé  documenting Zaka’s role in the rampant mishandling of forensic evidence that day and its subsequent campaign of misinformation.

The Israeli government has maintained that it possesses evidence that has not been made public and has enlisted  international teams of forensic and other crime scene experts. Israel’s Ministry of Welfare and Social Affairs told the New York Times  there are “at least three women and one man who were sexually assaulted and survived.” But other Israeli officials have stated  that there are no known living victims of rape that day, while some have described the challenge of identifying potential victims.

On December 28, the New York Times published what instantly became the most widely circulated news story  purporting to document a widespread campaign of sexual violence orchestrated by Hamas. That story has come under intense scrutiny , including within the Times newsroom.

The family of Gal Abdush, whose alleged rape was at the center of the Times article, disputed the article’s assertion she was raped. One relative also suggested the family was pressured, under false pretenses, to speak with the reporters. Abdush’s sister wrote on Instagram that the Times reporters “mentioned they want to write a report in memory of Gal, and that’s it. If we knew that the title would be about rape and butchery, we’d never accept that.” A woman who filmed Abdush on October 7 told YNet  that Israeli journalists working for the Times had pressured her into giving the paper access to her photos and videos. “They called me again and again and explained how important it is to Israeli hasbara,” she recalled . This series of events was documented extensively by Mondoweiss .Critics of the Times story also pointed to the inconsistencies  of the accounts of some of the alleged witnesses featured, as well as to its use of information provided by members of Zaka. Several Israelis who survived the October 7 attacks have publicly claimed that they witnessed rapes by Palestinian assailants, but Israeli investigators have said they are still searching for supporting evidence. Authorities also say they must match alleged victims with specific eyewitness testimony in order to bring potential charges. What often goes unmentioned in Israel’s sweeping allegations is an important fact: Hamas was not the only Palestinian group to attack Israelis on October 7. Many individuals who had no knowledge of Hamas’s plans poured across the border and committed acts of violence in what has been referred to as an unplanned “second wave.” Some of these non-Hamas  Palestinians also took Israeli hostages back to Gaza. One survivor of the Nova music festival massacre, a veteran of Israel’s special forces, has given multiple interviews to major media outlets, including the New York Times, about a rape he claims to have witnessed. During an appearance on CNN, Raz Cohen described  the assailants as “Five guys — five civilians from Gaza, normal guys, not soldiers, not Nukhba,” referring to Hamas’s elite commando force. “It was regular people from Gaza with normal clothes.” Cohen, it must be noted, has told varying, sometimes contradictory, versions of what he witnessed. Israel has painted all actions on October 7 as being committed by Hamas and its fighters. That storyline obviously serves Israel’s military and political objectives, but the truth is more complicated. In light of Israel’s well-documented campaign of lies and misinformation about other events on October 7, incendiary allegations, such as claims that Hamas engaged in a deliberate campaign of systematic rape, should be viewed with extreme skepticism.

 

Friendly Fire 

As many U.S. media outlets and politicians have promoted and laundered Israel’s claims, spreading them far and wide, there have been strong voices among the Israeli public and media that have exhibited skepticism. This is especially true regarding the actions taken by Israeli forces as they responded to the October 7 attacks. Calls are growing inside Israel, led by survivors and victims’ families, for the Israeli government to provide a factual explanation of precisely how their loved ones died: Were they killed by Palestinian militants or by the Israeli military? Israeli media outlets have aired interviews with survivors and IDF personnel describing  what they refer to as “friendly fire” incidents , including the shelling of a house where Hamas commandos were holding Israeli civilians hostage. Families of some Israelis killed at Kibbutz Be’eri have cited  witnesses who said that an Israeli tank fired on a house filled with Israeli civilians held hostage on October 7. A dozen hostages, including 12-year-old twins, died inside the house after Israeli forces began shelling it.“According to the evidence, the shooting of the tank was fatal and killed many hostages in addition to the terrorists,” the families wrote  in a January 4 letter to the IDF’s chief of staff. Given the “seriousness of the incident, we do not think it is right to wait with the investigation until after the end of the war.” They demanded a “comprehensive and transparent investigation into the decisions and actions that led to this tragic outcome.” Israeli military Brig. Gen. Barak Hiram has since admitted he ordered the shelling that day. “The negotiations are over,” he recalled  saying. “Break in, even at the cost of civilian casualties.” 

Yasmin Porat, who had escaped the horrors at the Nova music festival and sought refuge in a home at Be’eri, offered extensive details on this incident, as Electronic Intifada reported . In a series  of interviews on Israeli media, Porat described how Palestinian commandos entered the home and told the Israeli civilians they intended to take them hostage and, after moving them to a location with other hostages at the kibbutz, ultimately used their Israeli captives to contact the police to negotiate. “Their objective was to kidnap us to Gaza. Not to murder us,” she told Israeli network Kan News. “And after we were there for two hours with the abductors, the police arrive. A gun battle takes place that our police started.” Porat, who said her captors “treated us very humanely,” described how she managed to escape the house by convincing one of the gunmen to exit with her. After using her as a “human shield” to exit the house, the Palestinian was taken into custody, and Porat remained on the scene as Israeli forces laid siege to the house. “They eliminated everyone, including the hostages. There was very, very heavy crossfire,” she said. “Everyone was killed there. Just horrible.” Other witnesses at Be’eri have described  how Israeli forces were able to retake the kibbutz from Palestinian fighters only after the IDF shelled houses where hostages were being held. There is also evidence  indicating that Israeli forces responding to the attacks at the Nova music festival, where 364 people died, may have killed Israeli civilians as they attacked Palestinian militants, including with munitions fired from Apache helicopters. Yedioth Ahronoth and other major Israeli media outlets have published reports detailing the massive fire from combat helicopters and drones unleashed against the gunmen who violently stormed the festival. Military sources described  the difficulty in distinguishing civilians from attackers, particularly in the early phases of the Israeli counterstrike. 

In the most sweeping journalistic account to date of the events surrounding the Israeli military’s operations on October 7, Ronen Bergman and Yoav Zitun — two well-connected and prominent Israeli journalists —wrote  about the state of chaos and panic within the security establishment. They described “a command chain that failed almost entirely and was entirely blindsided; orders to open fire on terrorist vehicles speeding towards Gaza even as there was a concern that they contained captives — some sort of renewed version of the Hannibal Directive.” The Hannibal Directive, which dates back to 1986 and has been the subject of great controversy in Israel, authorized military forces to stop the kidnapping of Israeli soldiers at all costs, even if it meant shooting or injuring the captives. In a 2003 investigation , the Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported the broadly held understanding of the directive: “From the point of view of the army, a dead soldier is better than a captive soldier who himself suffers and forces the state to release thousands of captives in order to obtain his release.”The Hannibal Directive was allegedly rescinded  in 2016. But Bergman and Zitun report that by midday on October 7, the IDF issued a similar order, instructing all units to stop Hamas from bringing hostages back to Gaza and to do so “at any cost.” They describe Israeli helicopter gunships, drones, and tanks firing on any and all cars en route to Gaza, burning them and in some cases killing everyone inside the vehicles. Haaretz reported  on an IDF commander, locked in a subterranean bunker, calling in a strike against his own bases “in order to repulse the terrorists.” The truth is that we do not know how many of their own people Israeli forces killed during the counteroffensive on October 7. Nor do we know what happened in the firefights  when armed Israelis, including kibbutz private security and military personnel, sought to defend their settlements.

How many Israelis — soldiers and civilians — were killed in the chaos and had their deaths recorded as killed or sadistically burned alive by Hamas?

Beyond the deadly shelling of the house at Be’eri, the public has been given very few details of what exactly transpired when official Israeli military forces deployed to confront the commandos from Gaza. Israeli military and police forces engaged in prolonged standoffs and shootouts with Palestinian gunmen holed up in houses, police stations, military installations, and other buildings, often holding hostages. In some cases, these battles went on for days. In November, Netanyahu senior adviser Mark Regev was asked by MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan about some of the lies told by Israeli officials and soldiers about the events of October 7. Regev remarked that when a claim has been proven false, Israel retracts or clarifies it. “We originally said, in the atrocious Hamas attack upon our people on October 7, we had the number at 1,400 casualties and now we’ve revised that down to 1,200 because we understood that we’d overestimated, we made a mistake,” Regev said . He then added: “There were actually bodies that were so badly burnt we thought they were ours; in the end, apparently they were Hamas terrorists.” Israel’s social security agency has stated that the death toll from October 7 is 1,139 people. It has identified 695 Israeli civilians killed that day, along with 71 foreigners, most of whom were migrant laborers. Some 373 members of Israeli military and security forces were reported  dead. Israel has estimated that between 1,000 and 1,500 Palestinian fighters were killed that day, many of them during assaults launched with advanced weapons fired from tanks, helicopters, and drones. How many Israelis — soldiers and civilians — were killed in the chaos and had their deaths recorded as killed or sadistically burned alive by Hamas? How many Israeli lives were sacrificed under Hannibal-style orders to prevent them from being taken hostage at all costs? The answers to these questions will bring no absolution to those who initiated the carnage on October 7. No civilians would have died in those Israeli communities had Hamas not launched its operations. It is also true that if Israel had not engaged in a 75-year campaign of ethnic cleansing and apartheid, there would not have been an October 7. The illusion promoted by the Israeli state that its people could live a bucolic life in the “Gaza envelope” while their government enforced the caging and repression of 2.3 million Palestinians next door was shattered. The families of the dead deserve to have answers. The specifics of what happened that day also matter because of how these events have shaped the public attitude toward Israel’s war, with its horrifying death toll, particularly among Palestinian children. 

Faulty Justifications

Cynical manipulation of the truth has been a hallmark of Netanyahu’s career. He has long advocated for Hamas to achieve and maintain power in Gaza precisely because he believed it was the single best path to achieving his own colonial agenda.

 

“Anyone who wants to thwart the establishment of a Palestinian state has to support bolstering Hamas and transferring money to Hamas,” Netanyahu told  his Likud confederates in 2019. The logic was clear: The world will never give the Palestinians a state while Hamas remains in power. That’s why, since at least 2012, Netanyahu has facilitated the continued flow of money  to Hamas. 

By January 18, with the horrors in Gaza intensifying, U.S. and European diplomats were telling anyone who would listen that they were deep into planning for a “day after” scenario that would pave the way for a two-state solution. Netanyahu responded to this chatter by giving a televised speech in Hebrew. “I clarify that in any arrangement in the foreseeable future, with an accord or without an accord, Israel must have security control over the entire territory west of the Jordan River,” Netanyahu said . “That’s a necessary condition. It clashes with the principle of sovereignty but what can you do?”While it was reported as a defiant rebuke of his U.S. and European allies, there was nothing new in Netanyahu’s position. It has been the Likud party’s official stance since its 1977 charter. “Between the Sea and the Jordan there will only be Israeli sovereignty,” the document  reads. “A plan which relinquishes parts of western Eretz Israel, undermines our right to the country, unavoidably leads to the establishment of a ‘Palestinian State,’ jeopardizes the security of the Jewish population, endangers the existence of the State of Israel, and frustrates any prospect of peace.”

The hospitals are Hamas, the U.N. is Hamas, journalists are Hamas, European allies are Hamas, the International Court of Justice is antisemitic.

The lies that were spread in the immediate aftermath of the October 7 attacks did not end there. Nearly every week, sometimes every day, the Israeli government and military have unloaded a fresh barrage of allegations intended to justify the ongoing slaughter. The hospitals are Hamas, the U.N. is Hamas, journalists are Hamas, European allies are Hamas, the International Court of Justice is antisemitic. The tactic is effective, particularly because the U.S. and other major allies have consistently laundered Israel’s unverified allegations as evidence of the righteousness of the cause. The latest example is Israel’s campaign to destroy UNRWA, the single most important humanitarian organization in Gaza, which was established in 1949 specifically to protect Palestinians violently expelled from their homes and land by the creation of the Israeli state. Almost immediately after the ICJ ruled against Israel in the genocide case brought by South Africa in The Hague, Israel accused 12 of the organization’s 30,000 employees of participating in the October 7 attacks. Israel then presented the U.S. and other governments with “intelligence” it claimed to have obtained from the interrogations of Palestinian captives, documents recovered from the bodies of dead Palestinians, seized cellphones, and signals intercepts. Israel charged that 10 percent of UNRWA’s 12,000-person local staff in Gaza had some form of “links” to Hamas. “The institution as a whole is a haven for Hamas’ radical ideology,” an anonymous senior Israeli official told the Wall Street Journal in a widely cited article penned by a former IDF soldier.The innuendo-laced allegation of UNRWA staff having undefined “links” to Hamas and Islamic Jihad, or “close relatives” who belong to the groups is a risible charge given that Hamas is not just an armed militia, but also the governing civil authority in Gaza. The U.S. responded to Israel’s allegations by immediately announcing it was suspending all funding to UNRWA. “We haven’t had the ability to investigate [the allegations] ourselves,” Blinken admitted on January 30. Nonetheless, he declared: “They are highly, highly credible.” But journalists from Sky News reviewed the so-called dossier and reported, “The Israeli intelligence documents make several claims that Sky News has not seen proof of and many of the claims, even if true, do not directly implicate UNRWA.” Britain’s Channel 4 also obtained the document and determined it “provides no evidence to support its explosive new claim that UNRWA staff were involved with terror attacks on Israel.” The Financial Times, which also reviewed the materials, reported there were specific allegations of direct participation in the October 7 attacks against four Palestinians employed by UNRWA, not 12 as originally asserted. This was a transparent attempt by Israel to distract from the rulings in the ICJ genocide case and to obliterate a U.N. agency that Israel has  as an impediment to its goal of denying Palestinians the right to return to the homes and territory from which Israel expelled them. It was also an action that explicitly violated the orders issued by the world court, which directed Israel to “take immediate and effective measures to enable the provision of urgently needed basic services and humanitarian assistance.” Based on Israel’s sweeping and unverified allegations alone, the U.S. led scores of Western nations to denounce the U.N. agency and pull their funding at the moment it is needed most. From weapons and intelligence to political, diplomatic, and legal support, Israel has wanted for nothing from the Biden administration. The mounting pile of Palestinian civilian corpses and their surviving family members, meanwhile, are relegated to the workshopped afterthoughts uttered by Western politicians who have been told they should occasionally squeeze a line or two into their speeches about death and suffering in Gaza.

Propaganda and weaponized lies can only obscure the dead bodies, the forced starvation, the mass killing of children, and the utter destruction of an entire society for so long. Over time, it becomes increasingly difficult to conceal the nexus between the actions taken by Israel after October 7, the mendacious narratives it deployed, and Netanyahu’s desperate struggle to retain political power and his personal liberty. The 1,200 Israeli and international victims of October 7, and the more than 27,000 Palestinians whose deaths were justified in their names, deserve an unvarnished rendering of the truth.

 

OPINIONS

Sat 10 Feb 2024 6:16 pm - Jerusalem Time

When the West collectively punishes Gaza by suspending funding to UNRWA

Amira Hass

Amira Hass

Opinion Writer

UNWRA (the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Middle East), the main humanitarian channel to Gaza, sees some of its employees suspected of having taken part in the October 7 massacres. UNRWA announced that it had “immediately terminated” the contracts of the identified employees and opened an investigation to “establish the truth without delay”. [1] In response, the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia, Finland and the Netherlands decided to suspend their funding. 

Suspected of having participated in the massacres of October 7, 12 employees of the UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East) led 15 Western countries to sanction all inhabitants of the Gaza Strip, which is currently the most serious humanitarian disaster zone in the world.

Based on evidence provided by Israel to support these suspicions, the United States, followed by Japan and European countries, quickly announced the suspension of their contributions to UNRWA.


The UN agency provides services to nearly 6 million Palestinian refugees in the three countries and territories occupied by Israel since 1967, including East Jerusalem.


UNRWA has been in Israel's crosshairs for many years, which naturally prompted it to welcome these measures, as if the demise of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees erased the Palestinians' connection with their lost homeland and left it forgotten.


Starting next month, around 30,000 UNRWA employees will no longer receive their salaries and the education and health services the agency provides to hundreds of thousands of people will be seriously affected.

In the absence of these essential funds, UNRWA personnel in the bombed and bloodless enclave that is today Gaza will gradually cease providing emergency services.


They will no longer be able to carry out the most vital operations they undertook - at the risk of their own safety - in order to alleviate some of the misery of people today: transporting fuel to hospitals and to the neighborhoods in Gaza where water and sanitation networks have not yet been destroyed by the war, so that the drinking water supply is not completely exhausted and sewage does not further flood the streets ; ensure the most basic hygienic conditions in UNRWA schools overcrowded with hundreds of thousands of people displaced within the Gaza Strip; treating the sick in clinics, including those who have contracted infections from overcrowding and polluted water, and providing basic food parcels and bottled water to distribution stations for hundreds of thousands of hungry and thirsty people.

No aid organization is able to replace UNRWA, which has years of experience caring for Gaza's refugee population, in a matter of weeks.


In response to the allegations, the UN agency fired nine of its employees, while one employee was reportedly killed and two are missing. In addition, two commissions of inquiry have been appointed: one will present its findings to UNRWA and the other to the United Nations headquarters in New York. But these measures did not satisfy the countries of the enlightened world.


Their decision to opt for collective punishment will worsen the hunger, malnutrition, thirst and disease ravaging the Gaza Strip. The rapid announcement by these states demonstrates their contempt for the interim order issued last month by the International Court of Justice in The Hague, which ordered Israel to take all measures in its power to prevent genocide, including guaranteeing the entry of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip - an area in which UNRWA plays a central role.


Fifteen countries, led by the United States and Germany, signal that they view the humanitarian catastrophe in the Gaza Strip less seriously than suspicions raised by evidence about 12 agency employees, and that it is less urgent to reduce or stop this mass catastrophe than to please their ally, Israel.


And it is an ally which, for decades, has pursued a policy of colonization and forced displacement of Palestinians, to which these other countries are also opposed on paper. They are well aware of reports of Israeli soldiers and civilians killing unarmed Palestinians and of the fact that in most cases the perpetrators of these crimes go unpunished. High-ranking ministers from their ally Israel have openly advocated the crime of expelling Palestinians from Gaza.


Therefore, the contrast with the timid condemnation of the 15 countries - if they did so at all - only intensifies the ignominy of their decision to aid Israel in its campaign of vengeance and destruction against all residents of Gaza.

Source: la-bas Magazine

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 6:13 pm - Jerusalem Time

Report: Israel informs a number of countries of its readiness for a ground operation in “Rafah” south of Gaza Strip

The Israeli Broadcasting Corporation "Kan" reported that Tel Aviv informed a number of countries in the region and the United States that it was preparing for a military operation in the Rafah area.


The Kan report stated that after the request of both Egypt and the United States, the ground operation in Rafah would begin only after two conditions:


- A massive evacuation of residents from Rafah and its environs.


- An agreement between Israel and Egypt on Israeli military activity against the tunnels in the “Philadelphia” axis (Salah al-Din Axis).


The report added, “Israel has prepared a detailed plan, with an experimental model, that allows the return of tens of thousands of Gazans to northern Gaza, which is as follows:


- First, complexes will be set up in clinics and schools with bakeries.

- Later, a tent city will be set up nearby.


After that, food, water and humanitarian equipment will be brought in continuously from the Erez and Karni crossings in northern Gaza.


Then responsibility for the region will be transferred to local officials in Gaza, and the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Palestinian Territories will participate in implementing this step.


It was noted yesterday, Friday, that “the Israeli security apparatus has begun preparing a plan to evacuate residents from Rafah and is studying both possibilities:


- Evacuating citizens to Khan Yunis, north of Rafah, or allowing the return of a large number of Gazans to specific locations in northern Gaza.


The occupation forces intensified their targeting in the southern Gaza Strip, especially in the city of Rafah, where more than a million Palestinians were displaced to the region as a result of the Israeli military operation in the Strip.


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also informed the War Council of the date of completion of the Israeli army’s operation in Rafah by the beginning of the month of Ramadan, corresponding to March 10, according to an Israeli official told CNN.


The government media office in Gaza warned of "a global catastrophe and massacre that could leave tens of thousands dead and wounded if Rafah Governorate is invaded by the Israeli army."


It is noteworthy that Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Galant and other Israeli officials announced in recent days that "the Israeli army will expand its ground operation to Rafah to dismantle the Al-Qassam Brigades, the military arm of Hamas, in the city of Rafah."

PALESTINE

Sat 10 Feb 2024 5:40 pm - Jerusalem Time

The Palestinian President is preparing to form a "technocratic" government headed by Muhammad Mustafa

Informed sources revealed to Al-Sharq on Saturday that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is preparing to form a new government, in preparation for the next day of the war on Gaza, with the security and reconstruction of the Strip being its top priorities.


The sources explained that the new government will be a "technocrat" and not a political government, pointing out that the Palestinian President nominated the head of the Investment Fund, Muhammad Mustafa, to assume the position.


The sources reported that a team of experts prepared a plan for the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, at the request of Abbas, and one of the most prominent features of this plan is “establishing a reconstruction authority” that operates under the supervision of the World Bank and is subject to an international accounting firm.


Topics of the Qatar meeting

The sources indicated that Abbas will present the idea of the new government to the Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, during their meeting in Doha, next Monday, to present it to the Hamas movement.


Abbas's visit to the Qatari capital comes at the invitation of Prince Tamim bin Hamad, to discuss opportunities for Hamas to join the Palestine Liberation Organization, and to discuss extending the influence of the Palestinian Authority to Gaza after the end of the war, in addition to the reconstruction of the Strip, based on common "Palestinian-Palestinian" understandings. .


US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken suggested to the Palestinian President, in his penultimate visit, to prepare for the day after the war, and not to wait until the war ends. He proposed establishing a government more representative of the Palestinian people, and developing a plan for reform and reconstruction.


Informed sources said that Abbas briefed Blinken during his recent visit on the ongoing preparations to form the new government and the reconstruction plan, in addition to another plan to reform the administrative, legal and financial systems of the Authority.


Abbas stipulated that Washington guarantee Israel's release of Palestinian funds held by Tel Aviv, before proceeding with changing the government.


Hamas welcomes, but on one condition

In the same context, Hamas officials told Al-Sharq that they welcome cooperation with the Palestinian Authority regarding the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, but there is a need for understanding on every step, including members of the government, and the nature of the body that will supervise the reconstruction. Its working system and references.


Hamas demands the formation of "a national reference for the government and the Reconstruction Authority, in which various Palestinian political forces and independent national figures participate."


Hamas officials also welcomed Qatar's efforts to reach "Palestinian-Palestinian" understandings regarding the nature of the government and the authority responsible for reconstruction, and the movement pledged not to disrupt these efforts aimed at rebuilding Gaza and helping the people of the Gaza Strip confront the effects of the war.


An Israeli plan... a Palestinian response

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the Israeli army, on Friday, to develop a “double plan” to evacuate Palestinian civilians from the crowded city of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, and “defeat” the last Hamas fighters there, in light of mounting pressure on Tel Aviv, due to its threat. Launching a ground attack on Rafah.


Netanyahu's office said in a statement, "It is impossible to achieve the goal of the war without eliminating Hamas and the remnants of 4 Hamas brigades in Rafah. On the contrary, it is clear that the intense activity in Rafah requires the evacuation of civilians from the combat areas."


In turn, the Palestinian presidency expressed its "strong rejection", condemnation and denunciation of the statements made by Netanyahu regarding the evacuation of Rafah.


It considered in a statement that these plans constitute “a real threat and a dangerous prelude to the implementation of the rejected Israeli policy that aims to displace the Palestinian people from their land.”


While relief groups warned of a large number of Palestinian casualties if Israeli forces stormed Rafah, they also warned of the worsening humanitarian crisis in the city located on the border with Egypt.



ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 5:04 pm - Jerusalem Time

UNRWA: The possible Israeli attack on Rafah is a “recipe for disaster”

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) said on Saturday that “the possible Israeli military attack on the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, amidst these vulnerable and completely exposed residents, is a recipe for disaster.”


This came in a post by the UN agency on its account on the “X” platform.


UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini said, "Many of Rafah's 1.4 million people live in temporary plastic shelters on the streets."


He added, "The potential (Israeli) military attack on Rafah, amidst these vulnerable people who are completely exposed, is a recipe for disaster."


Lazzarini concluded his speech by saying that "I no longer find the words to describe the situation."


Earlier Saturday, the official Israeli Broadcasting Authority said that the military operation in Rafah would begin after the completion of a “large-scale evacuation” of civilians from the city and its suburbs.


Accordingly, the government media office in Gaza warned of a “global catastrophe and massacre” if Israel invaded Rafah Governorate.


Rafah is the last refuge for the displaced in the afflicted sector, and it includes more than 1,400,000 Palestinians, including 1,300,000 displaced people from other governorates, according to the government media office.


Since the beginning of the ground operation launched by Israel in the Gaza Strip on October 27, it has been asking residents to go from the north and center of the Strip to the south, claiming that they are “safe areas,” but it has not been spared from bombing homes, cars, and hospitals.


As a result of the atrocities committed in the Gaza Strip, Israel faces accusations of committing “genocide” before the International Court of Justice, for the first time in its history, which was met with regional and global welcome for putting an end to Israel’s impunity, while this faced American opposition.



PALESTINE

Sat 10 Feb 2024 2:48 pm - Jerusalem Time

During the past 24 hours: 16 massacres in the Gaza Strip, claiming 117 killed

Medical sources reported that the Israeli army committed 16 massacres against families in the Gaza Strip, killing 117 persons and wounding 152, during the past 24 hours.


The same sources indicated that the number of killed had risen to 28,064 persons and 67,611 wounded since the start of the aggression on the Gaza Strip on the seventh of last October.


Thousands of victims remain under rubble and on the roads, as the occupation prevents ambulance and civil defense crews from reaching them.


ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 2:01 pm - Jerusalem Time

Sources in Cairo: Israel sends its response to Hamas’ response regarding the exchange deal

Sources in Cairo say: Israel has categorically rejected the condition put forward by Hamas, which is to stop fighting in the Gaza Strip in exchange for a deal to release the kidnapped people.


Israel officially informed the mediators in the talks with Hamas that it rejects the movement's response to the proposal raised in the Paris talks.


This came yesterday evening (Friday), when officials in Cairo said that Israel categorically rejected the condition set by Hamas, which was to stop fighting in the Gaza Strip in exchange for a deal to release the kidnapped people.


Meanwhile, contrary to what was reported in Arab media, the Coordinator of Government Operations in the Territories, Major General Ghassan Alian, Gal Hirsch, Chairman of the Forum for Families of Abductees and Prisoners, and Major General (retired) Nitzan Alon, did not visit Egypt.


For its part, the Kan TV channel reported last evening that Hamas had assigned Khalil al-Hayya, who is close to Yahya Sinwar, to Cairo, and he presented an independent plan for Hamas - and not a response to the plan agreed upon between Israel and the mediating countries.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 1:49 pm - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: German research institute sacks professor over criticism of Israel

Lebanese-Australian anthropologist Ghassan Hage says dismissal not surprising amid anti-Palestinian landscape in Germany

 

A Lebanese-Australian professor of anthropology has been sacked by a leading German research institution after criticising Israel’s ongoing assault on Gaza.

In a statement published on 7 February, the Max Planck Society said they had severed their relationship with "highly acclaimed" academic Ghassan Hage over a set of social media posts that they said were "incompatible" with the society's values.

The statement added that "racism, Islamophobia, antisemitism, discrimination, hatred, and agitation have no place in the Max Planck Society".

In response, Hage said he could not accept being characterised as racist over his views.

He said on Thursday that he was informed of his dismissal following a query made to the institute by right-wing newspaper, Welt am Sonntag, alleging that a series of his social media posts criticising Israel were antisemitic.

Hage said the newspaper on 31 January emailed him saying they noticed him making "increasingly drastic statements towards the state of Israel".

The paper also alleged that Hage has been “an activist for the [Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS)] movement for years,” which he refuted, saying that “I take my job as an academic too seriously to have time to be an activist”.

Shortly after, Hage’s institute received a similar query and informed him that the president of the Max Planck Society in Munich had forwarded it to the society’s lawyers.

“No one in Munich, lawyer or otherwise, contacted me or sought my opinion about [the allegations],” he said.

  The following day, the institute’s directors notified him of the termination of his two-year post as a visiting professor.

“The decision was based on the way antisemitism has come to be defined and institutionalised in Germany which has been analysed and critiqued by many,” Hage said in his statement.

“For anyone who knows the German landscape at the moment, there is nothing surprising about this happening to me. Many people other than me have copped a variation on this same treatment.”

On 20 December, the Max Planck Society announced it would provide “additional funding for German-Israeli collaborations".

Citing the Hamas-led attack on 7 October, the society pledged an initial payment of 1m euros to Israeli research institutions.

Pro-Palestine voices silenced

Since the Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip began on 7 October, Germany has seen an escalating crackdown on pro-Palestinian advocacy, with rallies and Palestinian flags banned in many parts of the country.

Pro-Palestinian speech and the traditional keffiyeh scarfs have also been banned in schools, while Samidoun, a group that advocates for Palestinian prisoners, was banned in the immediate aftermath of the 7 October attack.

In the cultural sector, pro-Palestinian voices have also been widely silenced with cultural institutions reporting pressure to cancel events featuring groups critical of Israel.

In October, the Frankfurt Book Fair cancelled a planned award ceremony for the Palestinian author, Adania Shibli.

In November, Oyoun, a cultural institution, lost its state funding following its hosting of an event for a Jewish-led organisation that supported the BDS movement against Israel, a movement that Germany’s Bundestag classified as antisemitic in 2019.

On 31 October, British playwright Caryl Churchill was stripped of the European Drama Prize she had been given in April in recognition of her life’s work, over her support for Palestine.

 

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 1:46 pm - Jerusalem Time

Independent: Former Israeli PM Olmert accuses Netanyahu of unnecessarily prolonging the Gaza war

Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of unnecessarily prolonging the war in Gaza and obstructing the path to peace, while the kidnapped hostages were left to die.


In a stinging condemnation, Olmert said in exclusive statements to the British newspaper The Independent that Netanyahu's arrogance and "manipulation" were the reason for catastrophic security failures, and this is what allowed the attack by the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) on October 7, which led to the outbreak of the current conflict.


He also warned that the "messianic nationalists and right-wing extremists" whom the Prime Minister brought into the ruling coalition in Israel were obstructing the urgent need for a settlement, and had plans to purge the Palestinians of their vision of "Greater Israel."


Sharp criticism

The newspaper reported that Olmert's sharp criticism came at a time when Netanyahu rejected the latest international attempt at a ceasefire, declaring that the war would continue until complete victory.

Olmert told the British newspaper, "Israel has received tremendous support from Western leaders, from Rishi Sunak in Britain, from Olaf Schulz in Germany, from Emmanuel Macron in France, and of course from Joe Biden, whom I know well."


He added: "They have faced opposition to this support from some people at home. How long will they be able to continue this support if this Israeli government does not open even a narrow window for what may eventually become a peace agreement that ends this war?"


Olmert says there must be a ceasefire followed by all possible efforts to rescue the hostages who are still being held. He considered it foolish to do so and continue the “military campaign” which was no longer defensible while the hostages (prisoners) remained in captivity; It would be "absolutely unforgivable" and something Israel will never forget.


Hide the government's failure

Olmert indicated that Netanyahu is trying to hide his government's failure to prevent a Hamas attack by continuing military action, which clearly does not achieve its goals.


He added that Netanyahu is trying to pretend that this never happened. He talks about destroying Hamas and removing it from existence, and this is not humanly possible and cannot be achieved. It is impossible to destroy an organization hiding underground in the world's most crowded urban centers surrounded by civilians.


Even when the war ends, Netanyahu seems determined to pursue policies that will cause serious harm to Israel, according to Olmert.


Olmert said: "Israel should not maintain an occupying army in Gaza. This would be a very grave mistake. What should happen is the presence of an international force with a strong Western presence there. There are plans by people in this government to control the West Bank as well. Do we really want to impose occupation?" On 5 million Palestinians and depriving them of basic human rights, freedom of expression, and freedom of movement.


Olmert continued: "I know that the tide of public opinion turned against the idea of a Palestinian state after the Hamas attack. But I believe that people will reconcile in a relatively short time to the need for a Palestinian state; there is no alternative to this that can succeed." He pointed out that Netanyahu, who is now criticizing the withdrawal from Gaza, had voted in favor of it.


Source: Independent

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 1:39 pm - Jerusalem Time

Biden's aide admits in a closed meeting that there were mistakes in the United States' response to the Gaza war

In a closed meeting with Arab American leaders in Michigan this week, one of President Biden’s top foreign policy aides acknowledged mistakes in the administration’s response to the war in Gaza, saying he had “no confidence” that the Israeli government was prepared to take “steps Purposeful towards establishing a Palestinian state.


John Feiner provided some of the US administration's clearest expressions of remorse for the mistakes it has made since the beginning of the Israeli war on Gaza.


These statements came after months of public and private warnings from the Biden administration to Israel to take a more active approach to the war, which has claimed the lives of more than 27,000 Palestinians, according to health authorities in Gaza.


US President Joe Biden himself announced that Israel had exceeded the limit in its response to the Hamas attack on October 7 (Operation Al-Aqsa Flood on the Israeli settlements surrounding Gaza).


Biden's aide, John Viner, and deputy national security adviser, offered some of the administration's clearest expressions of remorse for what he called the "mistakes" it had made since the beginning of the violence, and pledged that it would do better, according to what the New York Times revealed.


During the meeting held Thursday with Arab American political leaders in Dearborn, Michigan, Feiner said, “We are well aware that we have made mistakes in the response to this crisis since October 7,” according to a recording of the meeting.


An official at the National Security Council confirmed the authenticity of the recording.

“We left a very damaging impression based on what was a woefully inadequate public accounting of how much the president, the administration, and the state value the lives of Palestinians,” Feiner added. “And that started, frankly, very early in the conflict.”


Feiner: We have no confidence that the Israeli government is prepared to take meaningful steps toward establishing a Palestinian state


The New York Times noted that the Israeli war in Gaza has become part of a series of political problems facing Biden, who has remained publicly supportive of Israel and has resisted demands within the Democratic Party to call for a ceasefire along with his statements that cast doubt on the number of victims of Israeli air strikes. He described the loss of life as “the price of waging war,” statements that angered young people, black voters, and the progressive movement most sympathetic to the Palestinian cause.


The recording of the Dearborn meeting provided an unusual behind-the-scenes glimpse into the administration's attempts to rally support in the battleground state of Michigan, which has a large Arab-American population in Dearborn and other Detroit suburbs.


Polls show that Mr. Biden's support in the state has eroded. His allies there have warned the White House in recent months that it risks losing the state it won in 2020.


Mr. Feiner and several senior Biden administration officials, including Samantha Power, the administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development, traveled to Dearborn on Thursday for a series of meetings, including the one at which Mr. Feiner’s comments were recorded.


Those sessions came a week after Biden campaign aides, including Julie Chavez Rodriguez, his 2024 campaign manager, quietly traveled to the city and met with a handful of officials, including Rep. Rashida Tlaib, the Palestinian-American progressive who stands at the Democratic Party's forefront in advocating To a ceasefire.


However, Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud and several other local officials refused to meet with Ms. Chavez Rodriguez. Mr. Hammoud later issued a statement saying he wished to speak with decision-makers rather than campaign officials. White House officials then scrambled to arrange the visit.


During Thursday's meetings, Mr. Viner explained the US government's efforts to stop the war in Gaza. He said that building a formal diplomatic relationship between Israel and Saudi Arabia is a crucial step towards establishing a Palestinian state. He added that doing so requires politically difficult sacrifices from both countries and the United States.

PALESTINE

Sat 10 Feb 2024 1:39 pm - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: Israeli army pursues shepherds in Khirbet Al Farisiya and detains a number of them

Today, Saturday, Israeli forces pursued shepherds in the northern Jordan Valley and detained a number of them.


Human rights activist Arif Daraghmeh reported that the occupation forces pursued the shepherds east of Khirbet Al Farisiya and detained four of them.


Earlier today, settlers began grazing their livestock on citizens’ crops in the Ghazal Spring area in Khirbet.


It is noteworthy that shepherds in many areas of the northern Jordan Valley are subjected to almost daily persecution and attacks by settlers and Israeli forces.

OPINIONS

Sat 10 Feb 2024 12:37 pm - Jerusalem Time

INTERVIEW WITH JEAN-PIERRE FILIU: “We must come out on top with a mobilization commensurate with the tragedy”

libération Newspaper

libération Newspaper

Opinion Writer

By Hala Kodmani, Luc Mathieu and Sonia Delesalle-Stolper

In his latest book, “How Palestine was lost and why Israel did not win”, published this Friday, historian Jean-Pierre Filiu traces the origins of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and recalls that despite an overwhelming balance of power, Israel's victory or security is not assured until a two-state solution is achieved.


The October 7 attacks in Israel constituted an atrocity and all feelings about it are acceptable, except surprise, estimates historian Jean-Pierre Filiu in an interview with Libération. For the researcher, university professor at Sciences-Po, this violence by Hamas and that of the unprecedented reprisals by Israel which followed in Gaza find their genesis in the cancellation in 2021 by the president of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas , elections. The selfishness of Arab countries, the blindness and lack of commitment, over the decades, of Westerners during poorly prepared peace processes also explain the critical situation in which the region finds itself today. For the historian, author of How Palestine was lost and why Israel did not win published this Friday February 9 by Editions du Seuil, only total commitment and the imposition of a two-state solution, quickly, through international community, and in particular the European Union, can offer hope of the beginnings of a solution.

Your book comes out four months after the conflagration of October 7.

I had already been working on this book for a long time but, in view of current events, I offered to submit it earlier. I was thus able to better absorb the trauma, as it is all trying, especially when you have friends and relatives on both camps. After decades of working on this subject, I sought to renew the perspective and the interpretation, because if we do not obtain the right answers, it is perhaps because we are not asking the right questions. I try to deconstruct the chronology rather than tell the story we all know about different dates, different turning points and lost opportunities.


Why were they lost?

First there is the Palestinian defeat and the balance of power which allowed this defeat. But the dominant party did not necessarily win, because the specificity of this conflict means that, even with an overwhelming balance of power, not only is Israel's victory not assured, but its security is not guaranteed either. not guaranteed. This is obviously the most tragic message of the bloodbath of October 7. The paradox is that the expression “peace process”, polite, elegant, consensual, has in fact always meant the negotiation of the conditions of Palestinian defeat. However, the negotiation only focused on interim arrangements and never really came to fruition. We therefore remained in an in-between war and peace which could have given the strongest the illusion of an indefinitely manageable situation. However, I have said it consistently for years: the status quo is untenable.

You write it: the events of October 7 are an atrocity, a nightmare, a tragedy. But the only thing we can't say is that it was a surprise.

All feelings are indeed legitimate, except surprise. Which obviously does not mean that the event was in itself predictable in its climax. This is indeed a turning point, but within a long-term and already very busy trend. I wrote in 2014 that banking Israel's security on the permanent insecurity of Gaza was a tragic illusion, but above all a strategic mistake.

Why didn't the Israelis want to see the alerts?

It’s always the same, it’s the ideological blinders. That is to say, the dominant fails to recognize his victory because he cannot, even intellectually, put the vanquished on an equal footing, even within a framework of victory and defeat. The sequence leading to October 7 actually begins when Mahmoud Abbas cancels the Palestinian elections in April 2021. This is fundamental.

What is the connection ?

This is where everything changes because the political path is closed by a Palestinian decision, by Abbas who refuses to consider his own succession even though he had committed not to run again, while Hamas had committed not to present a candidate. There had been no presidential elections since the election of Abbas in 2005, no legislative elections since the victory of Hamas in 2006. With these two elections planned for 2021 for the presidency and the Parliament of the Palestinian Authority, we would emerge from such a lack of popular legitimacy. It was the only way of hope. But Abbas ultimately went back on his word. And the international community wiped its brow and said “Phew!”, when it should have said to itself: “Catastrophe!” The United States, Europe and donors were so panicked by the idea of an Islamist victory that they preferred not to have elections.

How then does the gear engage?

In May 2021, a month after this closure of political space, there was a sequence of violence by Sheikh-Jarrah and Al-Aqsa in Jerusalem [explosion of violence after the forced eviction of Palestinians, editor's note], then Gaza and communal riots in Israel. These unrest contribute to the arrival of the supremacists in third position in the following Israeli elections, therefore to Netanyahu's return to power at the end of 2022. In the meantime, Yahya Sinwar, to whom Israel gave the keys to Gaza – we must still call things by their name –, is the first leader of Hamas to control both the political and military branches, because the Al-Qassam brigades are acquired by him. When does planning for the operation begin? Perhaps we will know precisely one day, but it began very early on within the Hamas shock troops [special forces unit], the Noukhba.

But what was the aim of the October 7 attack?

My guess is that Hamas was hoping for the big deal: all their hostages for all the Palestinian prisoners. They had already tried this in return for soldier Gilad Shalit in 2011, when they did not obtain the release of Marwan Barghouti [who is still serving several life sentences], the most popular figure of Fatah and the Liberation Organization of Palestine (PLO), but that of more than a thousand prisoners, including Sinwar and activists mainly, without being exclusively from Hamas.

You explain that Israel's blindness resembles ideological blinders, the feeling of being, historically, the strongest?

What is striking when we read Zionist literature, even in its origins, is that it talks very little about Arabs. This is what we call the hidden question, hence the first reflex of Zionist leaders, whoever they may be, which is to corrupt, to buy land from absentee owners, to buy complicity. When we buy, we maintain a relationship of domination. And the idea persists because Palestinians agree with it. They divide and allow themselves to be bought. We must never forget that the corrupter could not corrupt without a corrupter. I try to explain it by Palestinian factionalism. We have to see how entrenched these divisions are, it’s incredible.

When you talk about factionalism in the villages, does this go back to disputes over land or between families?

It is more of an anthropological construction. And, when we arrive in the 20th century, Palestinian nationalism is paralyzed by the quarrels between the supporters of the Husseini and the Nashashibi, the two great families of Jerusalem. The Zionist movement has certainly not stopped growing, but all the while establishing a Jewish people, proud of it, on its land. A national movement can be more or less factional, without calling the nation into question. We come back to the ideological blinders of the Zionists and then the Israelis, when they say: “As the Palestinians are divided, in fact, they are not a people with national rights.” And they add: “We will be able to buy Hamas like we bought the Palestinian Authority.” Buying in this case meant granting work permits to the inhabitants of Gaza.

Is this what happened to Gaza?

In addition to the ideological blinders, there is also a constancy that I will call the Fauda syndrome [from the Israeli series]. It is the idea that we can know the Palestinians from afar, that we can control them through a riot of cutting-edge technology. But Israelis have lost the meaning of Gaza, they talk about it without the slightest idea of its realities. I didn't follow the fourth season of Fauda, but the third on Gaza was largely a fantasy. It does not refer to anything about the way Gaza works, whereas, on the West Bank, the directors had real documentation, real experience. But there is no Israeli who has entered Gaza other than in a tank or as a hostage since 2007.

Conversely, Hamas knows much more about Israel?

In Gaza, we are under the control of Hamas day and night. The territory is gridded. And then there is the fact that the majority of Israelis do not speak Arabic, even in the army, even in the intelligence services, while the majority of Hamas leadership speaks and reads Hebrew. Many learned it in prison, where they all ask for books to study Zionist thought. Thus, in the balance of power which is nevertheless overwhelming in favor of Israel, the knowledge differential is in favor of the weakest. We have been bombarded with the omnipotence of the Mossad, the omniscience of the Israeli services, but this is partly a myth.


There is also the reality that Gaza is at the heart of Palestine, a reality that most Palestinians themselves have found difficult to accept. My book, History of Gaza, which dates from 2012, was translated into English and Turkish, but never into Arabic, because it embarrassed both Fatah and Hamas too much. When Abbas lost Gaza in 2007, he could have returned but he told his loved ones: “Good riddance!” But Gaza is Palestine. In 1948, the Gaza Strip is what remains, that’s literally it. There are 77% for Israel, 22% annexed to Jordan, and there is this 1%, neither for one nor the other, administered by Egypt which refuses to annex it. And of this 1%, there is a quarter of the Arab population of Palestine. Ben-Gurion understands immediately, he says: “I have to annex and move.” He proposes to resettle 100,000 Palestinian refugees in Israel. Obviously, Egypt refuses this annexation. Since then, Gaza has been the key to the Palestinian question.

You point the responsibility to Christian Zionists. For what ?

They are the real warmongers, the real hawks. We know little about them in Europe even though it is undoubtedly the only ideology of the 20th century which has achieved nothing but success, for a simple reason: it has never had direct control over the Holy Land. This series of victories began with the “reunification” of Jerusalem in 1967 and, ten years later, the defeat of Labor against Likud, which advocated the undivided ownership of the “land of Israel”.

What is their thesis?

For these evangelicals, the return of the Jewish people to their land is part of the fulfillment of the prophecies and will open, after seven cycles, that of the kingdom of God. This evangelical vision of return nourished, from 1917, the Balfour Declaration of British support for the Zionist project in Palestine. These believers are convinced that their salvation, whether they will go to heaven or hell, depends on the refusal of any territorial concession. And it was to satisfy them that Trump moved the United States embassy to Jerusalem in 2018.

How do you explain the abandonment of the Palestinians by Arab countries?

The Middle East is structured around the Palestinian question, even if by default. The first Israeli-Arab conflict completely eclipsed the first Israeli-Palestinian conflict in 1948. We focused on this conflict between states and, in the end, all the Arab regimes agreed that the Palestinians would not have representation. The tragedy of Palestine is that it is Arab enough for Arab countries to claim it, but too Palestinian for them to really defend it. Yasser Arafat's Fedayeen will try to attract Arab countries into their confrontation with Israel. They will succeed, and it will be the rout of 1967 [the Six-Day War]. They will never be self-critical and will continue on the theme “revolution until victory”.

Then there was the cycle of Palestinian-Arab wars…

Yes, the two most violent will be those of Hafez al-Assad against Arafat, in 1976 and 1983 in Lebanon. This exhausted the Palestinian movement. It took the first intifada [1987-1993] to bring the PLO back to the Palestinian territory proper, while the Islamists had never abandoned it.

Has the two-state solution paradoxically become possible again since October 7?

Since the imposition of the British mandate on Palestine in 1922, there have been only two solutions: either a binational state or two states. Today, Israelis are demanding separation, which is a cause for optimism. We must return to simple things, there are the borders of 1967 and the separation must be with the other. Peace will be an Israeli victory anyway.


Who, on the Palestinian side, will negotiate with Israel?

We must go beyond the static observation to trigger a dynamic which will see the emergence of partners for peace. But this can only work under two conditions: a peace treaty without an interim period and an internationally imposed solution. The European Union will have a fundamental role to play, because its fate is also at stake in Gaza. Indeed, if Netanyahu clings to power and manages to elect Trump, Putin triumphs in Ukraine. If this is not enough to motivate Europeans... The situation is unprecedented, with such intensity of suffering on both sides that it is imperative to find a solution. The United States is reluctant to agree to a quick settlement, which Europe, on the other hand, favors, because it is necessary to come out on top with a mobilization commensurate with the tragedy. Let us not forget that the historic first Oslo Accord was a mutual recognition agreement between Israel and the PLO. From there, anything is possible.


PALESTINE

Sat 10 Feb 2024 10:50 am - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: 26 Palestinians killed and dozens injured in Israeli bombing

26 citizens were killed, the majority of them children and women, and dozens were injured, in the intense Israeli bombing of the central and southern Gaza Strip, which is entering its 127th day.


Medical sources reported that 25 citizens were killed, and others were injured, as the Israeli army bombed homes in central and northern Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip, since last night.


Israeli gunboats are firing intensely at the coast of Rafah.


A Palestinian fisherman was also killed, and another was injured, by fire fired by Israeli boats, off the coast of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip.


In an infinite toll, the Israeli occupation’s aggression against the Gaza Strip continues, by land, sea and air, leaving more than 27,840 killed and 67,300 wounded, in an infinite toll, while thousands of victims remain under the rubble and on the roads, as the Israeli army prevents ambulance and rescue crews from reaching them. .

PALESTINE

Sat 10 Feb 2024 10:48 am - Jerusalem Time

West Bank: Raids and robberies of money and gold jewelry

Today, Saturday, Israeli forces stole money and gold jewelry during an operation to storm and search dozens of homes in the town of Beit Ummar, north of Hebron.


According to local sources, the Israeli forces arrested 14 Palestinians during their raid on the town and the residents’ homes. 


The occupation forces also detonated vacuum bombs inside some of the homes they stormed in the town of Beit Ummar, causing major losses inside, stealing sums of money and gold jewelry, and seizing about 20 vehicles from the town.


The Israeli occupation forces beat two citizens after raiding their homes in the town of Bani Naim, northeast of Hebron.


Local sources reported that the Israeli forces raided the home of citizen Firas Hussein Hammad Ziadat, and beat his son, Yazan, after searching him and tampering with its contents.


The same sources added that the Israeli forces attacked the citizen Hossam Ali Hammad with severe beatings, which led to him sustaining minor injuries in the head, after they raided and searched his house.


They indicated that these forces searched the house of citizen Naji Hussein Ali Ziadat, and tampered with its contents.


North Salfit

In northern Salfit in the occupied West Bank, the Israeli forces stormed the village of Marda at dawn on Saturday.


According to local sources, the Israeli soldiers raided and searched several homes, amid the deployment of military vehicles and foot soldiers throughout the village.


East Qalqilya

The Israeli forces also stormed, at dawn on Saturday, the village of Kafr Qaddum, east of Qalqilya.


Nablus: The funeral of the child Bani Shamsa

Yesterday evening, Friday, the masses of the Nablus Governorate carried the body of the dead child, Moaz Bani Shamsa (17 years old), to his final resting place in the town of Beita, south of Nablus. 


The Ministry of Health in Ramallah announced the death of the child Moaz Ashraf Faleh Bani Shamsa (17 years old) as a result of being shot in the chest during clashes in the town of Beita, south of Nablus Governorate, after the Israeli forces stormed the town.

PALESTINE

Sat 10 Feb 2024 9:34 am - Jerusalem Time

War on Gaza: One death and 3 injuries by Israeli sniper bullets in Nasser Medical Complex

A citizen was killed and three others were injured, at dawn on Saturday, as a result of Israeli snipers shooting at them, in front of the reception gate of the Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Yunis, south of the Gaza Strip.


Medical sources reported that medical teams were unable to move between the complex’s buildings due to occupation snipers, stressing that the lives of 300 health personnel, 450 patients and wounded, and 10,000 displaced people inside the Nasser Medical Complex were threatened.


The Israeli forces continue their siege of the Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Yunis and reach its northern gate, where they are stationed in the meantime at the entrance to the Jordanian field hospital next to it.


Last night, the Israeli artillery fired fire and shells at the upper floors of the Nasser Medical Complex, and renewed its bombardment on the southern areas of the city of Khan Yunis.

PALESTINE

Sat 10 Feb 2024 9:29 am - Jerusalem Time

After 12 days: The body of the 6 years old child Hind, was found dead

Today, Saturday, the body of Hind Rajab (6 years old), and five members of her family (her uncle, Bashar Hamada, his wife, and his three children), were found after the vehicle they were traveling in was besieged 12 days ago, in the Tal Al-Hawa area, southwest of Gaza City.

A local source reported that the family of the dead Hind found her body this morning and the bodies of those who were in the vehicle, which was surrounded by Israeli tanks in the vicinity of the “Finance Roundabout” in the Tal Al-Hawa neighborhood, where her family members were killed, with the exception of her and her cousin Layan (14 years old).


The Red Crescent announced that its ambulance was found in the Tal al-Hawa area of Gaza City, and the dead of paramedics Zaino and al-Madhoun, after their traces were lost during the mission to rescue the little girl, Hind.


It explained that the Israeli forces deliberately targeted the ambulance immediately upon its arrival at the site, as it was found meters away from the vehicle containing the child Hind, despite obtaining prior coordination to allow its arrival to the site.


The incident of targeting Hind and members of her family shook the world, as appeals to find her did not stop after her news completely stopped with the Palestinian Red Crescent paramedics Youssef Zaino and Ahmed Al-Madhoun, who went out to rescue her, as the heinous crime of execution committed by the Israeli forces against them was documented through the publication of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society. An audio recording, in which the voice of the child Layan is heard as she tries to inform the ambulance services of what is going on around her, and she says: “My uncles are sitting and beating us, the tank is next to us, we are in the car and next to the tank.” After that, the sound of a barrage of bullets being fired was heard while Layan was screaming, and communication with her was cut off after that.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 8:50 am - Jerusalem Time

Washington intends to impose sanctions on Israeli soldiers in the West Bank

Yesterday evening, Friday, the Israeli Broadcasting Authority quoted sources confirming that the United States is preparing to impose sanctions on Israeli army soldiers working in the West Bank due to the lack of law enforcement against settler violence against Palestinians.


An internal report by the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs indicated that if answers were not provided to the US government regarding a series of accusations directed against soldiers and units of the Israeli army operating in the West Bank within 60 days, the United States would impose sanctions on the soldiers, in addition to army commanders.


The broadcasting corporation reported that the administration of US President Joe Biden warned Israel several times about not enforcing the law against settler violence against Palestinians, but Tel Aviv's response was not satisfactory.

Expansion of sanctions

According to the broadcaster, Israel takes the Biden administration's threats seriously, as the government prepares for the possibility of expanding sanctions to include army officials, members of the Knesset, and ministers.


A ministerial discussion on this issue is expected to be held in cooperation with the Military Prosecutor’s Office to find out how to avoid expanding the matter, according to the official body.


On January 1, Biden signed an executive order allowing the imposition of sanctions on Israeli settlers who attack Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, as well as blacklisting 4 of them.


The executive order authorizes the issuance of financial sanctions and visa restrictions against individuals found to have attacked or terrorized Palestinians or seized their property.


Biden believed that the situation in the West Bank, especially the high levels of violence by extremist settlers and the destruction of property, has reached unbearable levels and constitutes a serious threat to peace, security and stability in the region.


Early this month, Israeli sources reported that the Biden administration is considering imposing sanctions on the two extremist ministers in the Israeli government, National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.

It is noteworthy that last December, the United States began imposing a ban on granting entry visas to people involved in violence in the occupied West Bank.


Settlers' attacks, protected by the Israeli army, against Palestinians in the West Bank have increased since October 7, coinciding with Israel launching a campaign of arrests and raids in various cities in the West Bank.


Source: Al Jazeera + Anatolia

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 8:45 am - Jerusalem Time

Moody's lowers Israel's credit rating for the first time and has a "negative outlook"

The agency attributed the downgrade to the repercussions of the war in Gaza, which increases political risks. It also indicated in its report a “negative outlook,” which may lead to another downgrade of the rating.


On Friday, Moody's, the credit rating agency, lowered Israel's credit rating for the first time in its history, in light of the continuation of the war on Gaza, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that the rating "will rise as soon as we win the war."


The reduction in Israel's credit rating came in line with the expectations of Israeli economic officials, who had said in statements to the media: "We are not optimistic, but we will try until the last minute to prevent the downgrading."


Moody's announced that it reduced Tel Aviv's credit rating to level A2 from level A1.


The agency also indicated in its report a “negative future outlook” that may lead to another downgrade of the rating, if the security, geopolitical and economic situation of Israel deteriorates soon, due to the war in Gaza, or due to the expansion of the confrontation in the north of the country with Hezbollah.


The agency attributed the reason for lowering the rating to the repercussions of the war in Gaza, which increases political risks.


The agency expected Israel's debt burden to rise above pre-war expectations.


Moody's stated that "the reason for lowering Israel's rating is the war with Hamas, and its repercussions that increase the political risks for Israel."


It stressed that "the escalation of the conflict with Hezbollah is still ongoing, raising the possibility of a significant negative impact on the Israeli economy."


Commenting on the unprecedented decision, Netanyahu said, "Israel's economy is strong, and the reduction has nothing to do with the economy. Rather, it is entirely due to the fact that we are in a state of war."


He added: “The rankings will rise again once we win the war, and we will win,” he said.


Economists believe that there is a fear that companies will withdraw their business from Israel, or reduce their business during the current year.


Moody's had published a report addressed to investors in Israel last July, against the backdrop of legislation to weaken the judiciary, in which it stated that "there is a real danger of continuing political and social tensions and they will negatively affect the Israeli economy." In parallel, investment banks Morgan Stanley and Citi warned that they expect "increasing uncertainty regarding Israel's economic outlook."


In the wake of the war on Gaza, the credit rating agency Standard & Poor's decided to change Israel's credit rating forecast from "stable" to "negative", against the backdrop of a change in perception of regional risks following the war.


Moody's and the credit rating company Fitch also announced a similar change to the nature of Israel's credit rating, a week after the outbreak of the war on Gaza.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 8:36 am - Jerusalem Time

World Health: 721 attacks on Palestinian health facilities since October 7

“The attacks affected 98 healthcare facilities, including 27 hospitals out of 36 that were damaged, and affected 90 ambulances” in the Gaza Strip.


The World Health Organization reported that it had documented 721 attacks on healthcare facilities in the occupied Palestinian territories since October 7.


The organization's spokesman, Tarek Yasarevic, confirmed during a United Nations press conference held in Geneva, Switzerland, on Friday, that among the attacks were "about 357 attacks that targeted health care facilities in the Gaza Strip, killing 645 people and wounding 818 others."


Yasarevic explained that "the attacks affected 98 healthcare facilities, including 27 hospitals out of 36 that were damaged, and affected 90 ambulances" in the Gaza Strip.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 7:53 am - Jerusalem Time

“It may amount to war crimes.” UN issues its report on the assassination of Palestinians inside a hospital in Jenin

United Nations rapporteurs said on Friday, February 9, 2024, that Israeli forces raiding a hospital in the West Bank and killing three Palestinians, one of whom was receiving treatment, could amount to “extrajudicial execution and a war crime.”


This came in a statement issued by United Nations rapporteurs regarding Israeli forces storming Ibn Sina Hospital in the city of Jenin, in the occupied West Bank, on January 30, disguised as Palestinians.


war crimes

“Israel’s public and unlawful killing of three Palestinian men in Ibn Sina Hospital in Jenin in the occupied West Bank may amount to serious violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law,” the statement said.


It also stressed that "this may amount to extrajudicial execution and war crimes."


The statement also indicated that Israel claimed that the three dead were involved in “terrorist” acts committed by armed Palestinian factions, stressing that Israel must respect international and humanitarian law in all cases.


Then it explained that among those killed by the Israeli forces was a civilian receiving treatment in the hospital, called Basil Ayman Al-Ghazawi. He added: "Under international humanitarian law, killing a civilian receiving treatment in a hospital constitutes a war crime."


Demands an investigation be opened

On January 30, the Israeli army announced that it had assassinated three Palestinians inside Ibn Sina Hospital in a joint operation with the Shin Bet General Security Service and the Special Police Unit.


In this context, the UN rapporteurs’ statement called on Israel to conduct an investigation in accordance with international law, “in order to prosecute and punish those responsible for committing these crimes and those who helped commit them.”


It also called for implementing measures that would prevent possible “arbitrary killings” in the future, and taking the necessary measures in this regard.


Process details

The Israeli Channels 12 and 13 said at the time that the operation “was carried out within 10 minutes, as the force reached the third floor of the hospital and eliminated 3 Palestinians with silencer weapons.”


Channel 12 claimed that “the special force arrived at the hiding room on the third floor, eliminated the three with silencer pistols, and left unharmed within minutes.”

It also continued that the operation began with information examined by the Shin Bet about “the actual intention of the three Palestinians, Muhammad Jalamneh, Muhammad Ghazawi, and Basil Ghazawi, to carry out an attack in the near future.”


The Israeli army has previously carried out raids and arrests from inside hospitals, but it has never, at least in recent years, carried out an assassination operation inside a hospital.


According to a video clip from the hospital's surveillance cameras, 13 masked members carrying machine guns participated in the operation carried out by the special force, including one person who appeared as a doctor, another as a paramedic, and others who appeared as veiled women and men in Arab clothes.


The clip also shows members of the Israeli force forcing one of the Palestinian medical staff to sit on the ground, and one of the force members appeared to be carrying a mobile chair.


According to Anadolu's correspondent, the participants in the Israeli undercover force are "Musta'arabim", a term given to Israeli gangsters and members of special units who disguise themselves in Arab clothing or assume forms similar to Palestinian Arabs.

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 7:46 am - Jerusalem Time

La Hague ICJ: 52 countries make a statement before ICJ regarding Israel’s crimes in Palestine

The International Court of Justice announced, on Friday, February 9, 2024, that 52 countries, including Turkey, and 3 international organizations will express their opinions during hearings on the legal consequences of Israeli practices in the occupied Palestinian territories.


According to a statement published by the court, it will hold public hearings during the period between 19 and 26 February, regarding the legal consequences of Israeli practices in the occupied Palestinian territories, including East Jerusalem.


In this regard, 52 countries, including Turkey, in addition to the League of Arab States, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the African Union, will deliver oral statements, each lasting thirty minutes.


Turkey is scheduled to deliver its statement within the framework of the sessions at 09:00 GMT on Monday, February 26.


It is noteworthy that the sessions begin with the Palestine statement on February 19, and end with the Maldives statement on February 26.


On January 26, the International Court of Justice announced its preliminary decisions in the case brought by South Africa under the 1948 Genocide Convention.


Despite International Justice resolutions calling for an end to the attacks against the Palestinians, Israel is still continuing its attacks on the Gaza Strip, and is shying away from taking steps to end the human tragedy.


Earlier Friday, the Ministry of Health in Gaza announced that the death toll from the war on the Strip, after which Israel is being tried on charges of genocide, had risen to “27,947 killed and 67,459 injured since last October 7.”


The Ministry reported, in a statement, that “the toll of the Israeli aggression has risen to 27,947 killed and 67,459 injured since October 7.”


It also added: "The Israeli army committed 13 massacres against families in the Gaza Strip, claiming 107 killed and 142 injuries during the past 24 hours."


The Ministry also stated that “there are still a number of victims under the rubble and on the roads, and the Israeli army is preventing ambulance and civil defense crews from reaching them.”


This comes as the Israeli war on Gaza enters its fifth month, and most of its victims are children and women, according to the Palestinian authorities, and it has also caused “massive destruction and an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe,” according to the United Nations.



OPINIONS

Sat 10 Feb 2024 7:37 am - Jerusalem Time

Biden and Starmer will pay a heavy price for supporting Israel's war in Gaza

Middle East Eye

Middle East Eye

Opinion Writer

By David Hearst

History is going to be a much harsher judge of those political leaders who justified and tolerated Israel's ethnic cleansing in Gaza

For the last four months, the West has watched Gaza being demolished block by block.

Residential districts have been razed, universities, hospitals, libraries blown up. Families, which form the pillars of society, have been exterminated in their homes where they gathered en masse. 

The ranks of the middle class - doctors, journalists, academics, businessmen - decimated. Aid convoys have been bombed. The hungry queueing for food, or those simply trying to flee on foot, executed by snipers. 

These scenes of devastation are reminiscent of the worst crimes of the Second World War.

Tearing up a Hamas offer to halt the fighting and get his remaining hostages out alive, the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed this week to pursue victory to the bitter end. 

Rafah, which has become the last refuge, is set to become the next target. And yet four months on, this industrial scale operation has no difficulty in finding backers among those who identify themselves as liberals.

Justifying war

After a national tribute was organised for the French victims of the Hamas attack on 7 October, former French President Francois Hollande was asked whether French victims of Israel in Gaza do not deserve the same. 

"It cannot be the same tribute," said Hollande. "A life is a life and one life is equivalent to another, but there are victims of terrorism and victims of war. Being a victim of terrorism means being attacked as a French person or as a defender of a way of life. A collateral victim, you are in a war [...], it's not of the same nature," he added.

Three times Pulitzer Prize winner, columnist Tom Friedman justified the US and Israel setting fire to "the jungle" in the following words.

"Iran is to geopolitics what a recently discovered species of parasitoid wasp is to nature. What does this parasitoid wasp do? According to Science Daily, the wasp "injects its eggs into live caterpillars, and the baby wasp larvae slowly eat the caterpillar from the inside out, bursting out once they have eaten their fill."

Neither Biden nor Starmer sees the danger they are in over Gaza. But then neither did Bush or Blair when they invaded Iraq

"Is there a better description of Lebanon, Yemen, Syria and Iraq today? They are the caterpillars. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is the wasp.

"The Houthis, Hezbollah, Hamas and Kataib Hezbollah are the eggs that hatch inside the host - Lebanon, Yemen, Syria and Iraq - and eat it from the inside out. We have no counter-strategy that safely and efficiently kills the wasp without setting fire to the whole jungle."

The idea of Jews being parasites dates back to the Age of Enlightenment, but it was reprised by the Nazis in Germany and Austria. A Nazi poster likening Jews to lice who cause typhus is exhibited in the Holocaust Museum in Washington. Friedman would do well to pay it a visit, as indeed would the New York Times editor who put his piece up.

Hollande and Friedman are at the end of their careers. But US President Joe Biden and the Labour leader Keir Starmer aren’t. Both face an election this year. 

An electoral liability

Biden and Starmer's insouciance about the dangers that supporting Israel's campaign in Gaza could create for them is bizarre because each man prizes power above principle. They are shameless promise breakers.

One might have expected them to be more cautious before following Israel down the path of historical ignominy. Because every day this war continues, Netanyahu is looking less and less like the man to put your money on. 

Israel’s campaign in Gaza is becoming an electoral liability, precisely because it is now in its fifth month and shows no sign of stopping.

The toppling of Saddam Hussein stopped being an easy show of force for the US army the moment the Iraqi resistance started.

And yet two decades after George Bush and Tony Blair committed their career-defining error of invading Iraq, which cast a shadow neither man has been able to walk away from, Biden and Starmer are staging a repeat performance.

If the moment Blair sacrificed the trust of the nation was the "dodgy dossier" over Saddam Hussein’s non-existent weapons of mass destruction, the end of Starmer’s reputation with British Muslims came in what should have been a routine LBC interview.

Nick Ferrari asked Starmer whether Israel had the right to cut off power and water to Gaza. Starmer replied: "I think Israel does have that right. It is an ongoing situation. Obviously everything should be done within international law but I don't want to step away from the core principles that Israel has a right to defend herself and Hamas bears responsibility."

He quickly rowed back that remark, but that was the watershed moment.

Biden’s watershed moment came when he appeared to doubt the death toll produced by the Palestinian Ministry of Health. "I have no notion that the Palestinians are telling the truth about how many people are killed," Biden said, directly contradicting the assessment of the UN and international human rights agencies that their figures were reliable.

"We continue to include their data in our reporting and it is clearly sourced," the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in a statement to Reuters. 

Both statements tipped the scale of public opinion and had a devastating effect on Muslim voters on both sides of the Atlantic. 

Losing the Muslim vote

A poll released on Monday showed a dramatic fall in support for Labour from British Muslims. 

Data collected by Survation, commissioned by the Labour Muslim Network (LMN), showed that 60 percent of British Muslims who expressed a preference for a party said they would vote Labour. That represents a drop of 26 percent of Muslims previously polled in 2019. Only 43 percent said they would definitely vote Labour again, with 23 percent undecided.

Identification with Labour is down from 72 percent in 2021, to 49 percent in 2024 - with 38 percent of British Muslims stating they had a more unfavourable view of the Labour Party following the past 12 months. Starmer’s personal rating is -11 percent.

Support for Labour among Muslims has been steadily declining since the 2019 election, but the turning point into rapid decline came in November, a month into the Gaza war. In four months support for the party has plummeted from 70 to 40 percent.

Starmer’s instinct has been to double down. Shortly after his LBC debacle, he warned all elected representatives not to attend ceasefire protests. When Starmer’s refusal to call for a ceasefire was put to a vote, several members of his shadow cabinet resigned.

Since then more than 70 Labour councillors have resigned in areas like Oxford, Burnley, Hastings and Norwich. Resignations and expulsions of the anti-zionist left from the party are now producing a blowback. 

The marginal seats of two frontbenchers - Wes Streeting, the shadow health secretary, and Rushnara Ali, shadow minister for investment - are threatened, as well as the seats of John Ashworth in Leicester and the late Tony Lloyd's Rochdale seat, where a byelection is happening later this month. They could all be flipped by a Muslim vote which is greater than the Labour majority.

No one is under any illusion that the Muslim vote could stop Starmer coming to power. But it could make the difference between a Blair-style landslide and a minority government

Thirty six other seats including that of Margaret Hodge, who called the previous labour leader Jeremy Corbyn "a fucking antisemite and a racist" could be turned into marginals.

Grassroots groups are shooting up all over the place with thousands of volunteers ready to support independent candidates.

One group called The Muslim Vote (TMV) said that it will support independent candidates with resources, networks, volunteers and funding in constituencies where it thinks it has an audience.

An independent candidate could well stand in Starmer’s own constituency. A young British-Palestinian candidate, Leanne Mohamed, has already been found to challenge Streeting in Ilford North. 

The Redbridge Community Action Group who proposed her vowed to put forward a candidate that would be "strong on Palestine, NHS, racism, Islamophobia and the cost of living crisis".

This represents a potent fusion of Gaza and the agenda of the pre-Starmer Labour Party. All of which highly ambitious apparatchiks like Streeting are vulnerable on. Streeting himself is conscious of the danger he is in, and has started mouthing platitudes about the importance of a Palestinian state. Streeting refused to call for a ceasefire.

No one is under any illusion that the Muslim vote could stop Starmer coming to power, but it could make the difference between a Blair-style landslide and a minority government.

'Abandon Biden'

Biden is most vulnerable in Michigan. When faced with the mounting anger of a substantial Arab and Muslim population, the response of his campaign team was very similar to Starmer’s: to write Arabs off and find other paths to victory.

As Politico reported: "Biden’s support for Israel has hurt the campaign badly with the sizeable Arab-American population in Michigan, and his team is scrambling to find other paths to victory in the battleground state, according to two campaign advisers granted anonymity because they aren’t authorized to speak publicly about strategy."

Dearborn has the highest concentration of Arab Americans. It has become the epicentre of a national campaign against Biden’s reelection. As night follows day, an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal dubbed Dearborn as "America’s Jihad Capital". The local police presence has been ramped up as a result. 

We can expect the same smears to start appearing in the British right-wing media.

Activists from Michigan, Minnesota, Arizona, Wisconsin, Florida, Georgia, Nevada and Pennsylvania have created an AbandonBiden campaign, six of them battleground states. 

"We’re looking into finding ways to build a mechanism of coordination between all the swing states so that we’re constantly working together to ensure that Muslim Americans will come out in all of these states, and that Mr. Biden will lose each and every one of them,” said Hassan Abdel Salam, a professor at the University of Minnesota and a member of the #AbandonBiden National Coalition. "Right behind me, what Mr Biden should see is 111 electoral votes. And he won last time with 74."

Abandon Biden even if the victor of that campaign should be Donald Trump, the nemesis of Muslims? 

Well apparently yes. A new generation is on the march to change the face of the Democratic Party permanently. "We don't have two options. We have many options," Jaylani Hussein, director of Minnesota's Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) chapter, said in Dearborn, Michigan, when asked about alternatives to Biden. 

US Muslims don't expect to be treated better than the disdain - disrespect is a better word  - they are getting under Biden, but if Biden is reelected, the vote in November is their only chance to reshape US policy. 

Biden won Michigan by 2.8 percent points and Arabs account for five percent of the vote. Dearborn’s first Arab mayor, Abdullah Hammoud, is extremely clear about what he wants Biden to do.

"There has never been a war in history in which 80 percent of the country is absolutely decimated, where 100 per cent of the population has been displaced and where 50 percent of all deaths are children. That has never happened.

"For us, we want action not lip service. If President Biden wants to take a firm stance he can begin by restricting military aid to the state of Israel. He could begin by calling for a ceasefire because right now nearly 200 civilians  are killed each and every single day. These are tangible steps that can be taken because what we understand is only diplomatic efforts can lead to lasting peace and justice."

We can be sure of one thing. History is going to be a much harsher judge of those political leaders who justified and tolerated the ethnic cleansing now going on in Gaza.

Biden and Starmer’s refusal to call for a ceasefire and their refusal to back the ruling of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) that Israel should take steps to comply with the Genocide Convention, will produce an indelible stain on their careers.

Neither man sees the danger they are in over Gaza. But then neither did Bush or Blair when they invaded Iraq.

OPINIONS

Sat 10 Feb 2024 7:32 am - Jerusalem Time

The way forward for Palestine: A call for international protection

Sultan Barakat

Sultan Barakat

Opinion Writer

Only the end of the occupation can bring sustainable peace and stability to the region. But to achieve this, the international community must first ensure the safety of the Palestinian people.


In the wake of the landmark International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruling that Israel is plausibly engaged in a genocide of the Palestinian people in Gaza, all states that are party to the Genocide Convention now have a legal obligation to take material steps to put an end to Israel’s genocidal acts in the besieged Strip.

In this context, the decision by many Western nations to withdraw funding to UNRWA, the UN’s main humanitarian agency for Palestinian refugees, over unsubstantiated “terror” allegations made by Israel, is not only perplexing – the very opposite of what the court legally obliged them to do – but also highly abhorrent as starving Palestinians face a deepening famine and deadly disease outbreaks in besieged Gaza.

The real aim of Israel’s lobbying efforts to undermine UNRWA is the liquidation of the Palestinian identity and the right of return of the Palestinian people that the UN agency has come to embody.

If the Western states, and especially the United States, continue to bow down to Israel’s genocidal demands they will only add further weight to the accusations that they are complicit in its genocide in Gaza.

What is at stake today is not only the future of millions of Palestinians and the very viability of the Israeli state, but the stability of an entire region, and the future of the rules-based world order.

Unabated, Israel’s assault on Gaza, with the unconditional backing of the West, risks a regional conflagration further inflaming conflicts  from Yemen to Iraq and Syria, and paving the way for an unprecedented surge in terrorism across the globe.

Today, there is mounting anger towards Western powers not only in the Arab world, but across the Global South, for their perceived complicity in Israel’s massacres of Palestinian civilians. Terrorist organisations like ISIL and al-Qaeda could not have asked for a better environment to regroup and mount new attacks on the West, as the global majority now views the West solidly as an enabler of the ongoing genocide of an occupied and oppressed Indigenous people. There is every reason to expect such terror groups, or brand new ones like them, to take advantage of this moment and launch attacks against Western populations and their allies and supporters across the globe.

The future of the entire rules-based world order – and international law itself – is also very much at risk. The stark contrast between the West’s response to the war on Ukraine and the war on Gaza, has convinced many that international law applies to the West’s enemies, like Russia, alone. With the West demonstrating clearly that it considers itself and its allies, in this case, Israel, as being beyond the constraints of the law, there has been an immense loss of trust in international institutions like the United Nations. Indeed, the UN not only found itself completely powerless to stop Israel’s blatant violations of international law and attacks on Palestinian civilians, but could not even hold it to account for its outbursts against its secretary-general and targeting of UN staff in Gaza.

Given the global majority’s strong opposition to the continuation of Israel’s war on Gaza, and the expressed position in favour of a two-state solution of the vast majority of the UN member states, including the permanent five at the Security Council, there is only one way to give another life to the rules-based world order, bring stability to the Middle East, and prevent the dawn of a new era of terror across the globe: ending the occupation of Palestine.

This is also the only feasible way forward for Israel. After Hamas’s October 7 attack, as is evident in the erratic actions of its far-right government and the desperate acts of extreme violence it unleashed on the Palestinians, Israel has lost all confidence in its deterrence capabilities in the region. Israelis are feeling more vulnerable and exposed today than ever before. Many of its citizens have lost trust in the ability of the state of Israel to ensure their security, and are questioning the state’s viability in the region.

Only the end of the illegal occupation, supported by a settlement in which the Arab states assure Israel that it is indeed a part of the region, and can exist among them in peace and prosper, would allow Israel to regain a sense of security and permanence.

Clearly, the longest ongoing occupation in recent history must end – and quickly.  However, given the current gridlock and the total devastation of Gaza, the first step towards ending occupation should be to bring the Palestinian people – who have now been identified by ICJ as a unique “group” – under international protection.

This interim arrangement must be put in place under the auspices of the UN – whose involvement would restore the legitimacy of the rules-based order, for a period of three to five years, until a fully functional and independent Palestinian state can be realised.

During this period of international protection, an independent tsar, appointed by the UN with the approval of the global community, must lead the process and be responsible for day-to-day governance, with guidance and support from a special council made out of individuals representing all Palestinian factions, including Hamas.

There would likely be serious objections to the inclusion of an official Hamas representative into this set-up, but it should be possible to include in the council a non-member who is acceptable to the group, and can represent its interests. The inclusion of Hamas in any peace process is crucial as no sustainable settlement can be achieved without acknowledging the concerns and expectations of the group that has led Palestinian armed struggle against occupation for many years.

Given the West’s undeniable pro-Israel bias, the countries that have shown care and consideration for the rights and wellbeing of the Palestinians, and respect for international law, throughout this latest conflict, such as South Africa, Turkey, and Brazil, should be part of the international protection coalition. This coalition should also ensure the security and territorial integrity of Jordan and Egypt.

Security enforcement in the Palestinian territories during this transitional period under international protection could follow a hybrid model – a local police force supported by an international force.

The responsibility of shepherding such a proposal via the Security Council must fall on the United Kingdom and France given their historic responsibility in the creation of the State of Israel and subjugation of the Palestinian people.

The rebuilding of Gaza, which has been reduced to rubble in the past four months, will inevitably be part of the mandate in the interim international protection period. Countries that are directly responsible for the destruction, Israel, the US and Germany among others, should provide the bulk of the required financial resources, keeping in mind that the total rebuilding cost will be less than 20 percent of what the US has promised Israel in terms of additional military support to guarantee its security.

Alongside the formation of an inclusive interim council, a series of immediate steps must be undertaken by the international community to help restore Palestinians’ faith in the international community and the feasibility of its protection.

First, the ICJ’s interim ruling must be supported, and its recommendations implemented in full, by all the world’s nations. This means the killing must stop, captives on both sides should be released, the siege should end, adequate aid and basic services should reach all Palestinians in Gaza immediately. Meanwhile, an independent review of the West’s military support for Israel should be launched and they should be held to account for their complicity in genocidal acts. It must also be made abundantly clear to Israel’s far-right government that ethnically cleansing Gaza or the West Bank is not an option. All the hostages, on both sides, must be released.

Second, the international community must make it clear to Israel that it cannot infringe on the territorial integrity of Gaza by occupying any part of the territory, establishing a so-called “buffer zone” within it or dividing it into smaller settlements.

Third, the international community must unanimously call for an immediate and unconditional cessation of all illegal construction and land-grabbing activities in the West Bank and demand accountability for the violence and aggression perpetrated by Israeli settlers against the Palestinians. World’s nations must insist on Israel decommissioning all the settlers outposts in the West Bank, and obviating any such intentions in the Gaza Strip.

Fourth, Jordan’s custodianship of the Al-Aqsa Mosque must be maintained and sanctity must be restored to all Christian and Muslim holy sites in Jerusalem.

Finally, to ensure that the Palestinian people can live freely and with dignity under the governance of their own elected representatives, the international community should officially recognise a Palestinian state based on 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital and commit to ensuring the swift implementation of the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals in post conflict Palestine.

This promise can kick start the formation of a Palestinian social security/support system –  something which will be desperately needed the day after.

Source: Aljazeera

ARAB AND WORLD

Sat 10 Feb 2024 7:18 am - Jerusalem Time

The head of the CIA will visit Cairo next week to discuss a prisoner exchange deal

CIA Director William Burns will arrive in Cairo next week to participate and support the pending negotiations regarding the prisoner exchange deal.


According to the decision of the Israeli War Council, Israel will send a delegation on its behalf to the talks in Egypt on the condition that Hamas’s positions be softened, which demands an end to the war in the Gaza Strip in the response it sent to the mediators this week.


An Israeli report stated that Tel Aviv conveyed to both Cairo and Doha last night its answer to Hamas’ response, and rejected “a large part” of the movement’s demands.


A senior Israeli official expressed his pessimism to the Hebrew Channel 13, and said that the negotiations are “stuck” and the gaps between the two parties are still “large.”


According to the TV channel, Mossad chief Dedi Barnea is currently drafting a counter-proposal that will be formally presented on behalf of Israel to Hamas. This proposal is expected to receive the approval of the War Cabinet in the middle of next week.


On the other hand, two American and two Israeli officials told the American website Axios that Burns is expected to travel to Egypt next Tuesday.


Burns is the central figure for US President Joe Biden in efforts to secure a prisoner exchange deal and stop the war on Gaza. The website said that sending him to Cairo puts pressure on the Qatari and Egyptian mediators to push Hamas to agree to a “reasonable deal.”


American officials say that the White House acknowledges that the “hostage deal” is the only way to reach a ceasefire in Gaza. Biden said in televised statements on Thursday that he was pushing hard to reach an agreement.


According to an Israeli official, Israel made clear to the mediators that, contrary to Hamas’s demand, it would not agree to the withdrawal of Israeli army forces from the “corridor” south of Gaza City, which divides the Gaza Strip into two parts.



Israel will not agree to the return of residents to the northern Gaza Strip, according to the report, which indicated that despite this; Tel Aviv expressed its readiness to study the withdrawal of Israeli army forces from "city centers" in the Gaza Strip.


Israel told the mediators that it opposes Hamas's request to add the phrase "permanently" to one of the provisions of the Paris proposal, which stipulates indirect negotiations on returning to "calm (permanently)", in the first phase of the deal.


According to the report, Israel made clear to the mediators that it is not prepared to discuss, within the framework of the potential hostage deal negotiations, lifting the siege on Gaza.


Tel Aviv assured the mediators that the “key” to releasing the prisoners that Hamas presented in its response was unacceptable. Israel also stated that the long list of demands attached to Hamas' response, such as commitments related to Al-Aqsa Mosque, or regarding the conditions of prisoners in occupation prisons, are unacceptable and have no relation to the deal that could be reached.

PALESTINE

Sat 10 Feb 2024 7:13 am - Jerusalem Time

The war is on its 127th day: continuous bombing and threats to invade Rafah, the far south of the Strip

Clashes and battles continue between the resistance factions and the Israeli army in the areas of the incursion, especially in Khan Yunis and Gaza City.


Israeli fighters continue to launch violent raids in the Rafah area, since the early hours of Saturday night, amid reports that it is about to carry out a ground invasion of the city, which is crowded with hundreds of thousands of residents and displaced people near the Egyptian border with the Gaza Strip.


Yesterday, Friday, according to non-final estimates, 23 Palestinians were killed and dozens injured, in a series of violent Israeli raids that targeted areas throughout the Gaza Strip, and in the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.


In the latest toll announced by the Ministry of Health in Gaza on Friday, the toll from the ongoing Israeli war on Gaza rose to 27,947 killed and 67,459 injured since the 7th of last October. While the  Israeli army continues to commit massacres against families, claiming 107 killed and 142 injuries in 13 massacres during the past 48 hours.